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    July 1978: The Complete Recordings

    What's Inside:

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

    Announcing July 1978: The Complete Recordings

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

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

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

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

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  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Dead Storm Britain!
    Day 2 / Europe '72 / April 8, 1972 2nd night at the Wembley Empire Pool. Opens with one of several great Bertha performances of the tour. Jerry throws in some aggressive chord fills throughout that make it one of my favorites. Bertha seldom sounded better. This show has a lot of other standout performances as well. If I had to pick one of every song on the tour, I might grab a few from this night: Cumberland Blues, Deal, Big Railroad Blues, Beat It On Down The Line, and Hurts Me Too; all just super-tight. Nothing wrong with the other songs, just comparing these to other renditions on the tour. First Good Lovin' of the tour, and one of my favorites. Jerry throws in a great stab right at the "Come'on baby" line about a minute ten into the song that always begs to be turned up to 11. It's also one of the short versions (10 min), in case you're making a 4th of July mix and you don't want to impress the relatives with the Refrigerator Repairman story (although he's still going to jump in the saddle and ride). Bobby shines on the jam, and is up in the mix. I loved his sound in the pre-hiatus days. Also notable - Jerry stays on guitar for all of the April performances; by Rotterdam in May, he jumps on the organ for the Good Lovin' Reprise. Personally, I prefer him on guitar - it really gives the main riff a smooth jazzy groove (along with Keith's pie-anner) - for 2 and half minutes at the beginning and end, they sound like the Vince Guaraldi Trio. And of course the Dark Star is in my personal top 10. Great pre-vocal jazzy improv jamming for 12 minutes or so, where you have Jerry delivering those thoughtful, deliberate lead bits like only he can do (I envision him listening to what's going on around him, processing it for a moment, and then responding with these flurries of notes that somehow fill the space immaculately); underneath him you have Keith's piano wanderings providing a tranquil atmosphere like running water, unobtrusive and necessary, yet as effortless and natural to him as breathing (the man speaks piano). Then they get into Space for 10 minutes or so, but they don't go completely off the rails full-bore cacophony mode on this one (which is fine with me); and then comes some of the best melodic improv I've heard in a Dark Star, reminiscent of the core elements in Mind Left Body, Beautiful Jam, and Tighten Up. Before you realize it, they're into Sugar Magnolia and you're rewinding the tape to see if you zoned out or if it really is one of the smoothest transitions they've ever done (hint - it's both). Caution is nice, and they don't play it much on this tour, so enjoy it while you can. andoverdeadhead - thanks for the explanation. I was curious if they had reneged on the 15% off, simply because it wasn't in stock. I didn't have the Aerosmith belt buckle, but I sure had the KISS Destroyer one.
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Strangers In A Strange Land
    Day 1 / Europe '72 / April 7, 1972 Jimbo, 44 is the magic #. What are your favorites from this one? I like the two "clear cool water"s from Donna on this Greatest Story. Also love The Other One / El Paso / Wharf Rat medley. I ordered a Wembley Empire Pool t-shirt last week :) Anyone else diving into E72 Complete this Spring? I started last week, for fear of falling behind. I'm up to Tivoli 2, the sequel, 4/17......
  • NCDead
    Joined:
    Thanks droidmec
    Thanks for the heads up on the Europe '72 being such a big discount. I had been thinking of picking up for a while and was able to get Europe '72, From The Vault Box and Grateful Dead Movie sound track for less then Europe '72 was originally.
  • andoverdeadhead
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    @KeithFan
    About the discounted E72 sets, the 15% discount ended the Monday after BFRSD weekend and it reverted to full price at that time. So I missed out on the RSD special price but went ahead and ordered one anyway in mid-December and it was not until then that I learned it had gone out-of-stock. So mine was back-ordered for about 2 months until it became available again in early Feb. But I am happy just the same to have finally gotten one of the All Music Editions after reading all the effusive posts for much of the past year or more. By the by, KeithFan, let me join the chorus of those who have congratulated you on scoring one of the steamer trunks. A good call on getting a pristine set of the CDs to go with it, while you could!
  • One Man
    Joined:
    The Others
    Hey, I had that Aerosmith belt buckle too - the one with the font from Toys in the Attic. I'd wear that today if I could find it. Their early work is classic. I wish there was more in the vein of their first 4 albums. Keef is fantastic, though not like the blazing lead players y'all are comparing him to. He lifted an open G slide guitar tuning from Ry Cooder and wisely adapted it to non-slide playing, thus inventing the classic Stones sound heard on so many of their biggest hits. Anyone else playing this way is instantly pegged as an imitator. His most recent solo record is his best work with or without Mick in many many years. The man has deep deep soul, and that can't be measured by "best guitarist" standards.
  • wave-that-flag
    Joined:
    Random
    Just gave another listen to the full E72 box over the past month or two. 22 Monster shows that keep on giving. Lots of Pigpen--lookin' high, lookin low. Greatest tour ever from the greatest band ever? Probably. I'm in for the '78 box-set. Still listen to the Daves Pick 15 (4-22-78) quite a bit and love it. Red Rocks release--bring it! Artwork looks killer. Used to read a few Paul Pope graphic novela (allright comic books basically) awhile back. Still recall one trippy series called "Heavy Liquid." Not sure if Pope is an Iggy Pop/Stooges or Dead fan, but seems safe to assume so. Yeah, great American bands, I'll throw out The Stooges, if they haven't been mentioned. Great and pure protopunk. A little later than the Pranksters Acid Tests for sure but I believe they dosed themselves heavily and often before performing. Music still holds up well. Rush--never listened to them much--but they were huge in the day. Grew up near Boston so Aerosmith were on the turntable as a young kid quite a bit. Had a big brass Aerosmith belt buckle I used to wear back in Junior High thinking I was all that. Bought it at one of those mall smoke shops we used to have. Watch "Geeks and Freaks"on Netflix if ever nostalgic for those times. One season only, but great show. Season (and show) ends with Linda Cardellini (the "Lindsey Weir" character) heading off to follow the Dead on tour. Nice way to wrap up a cancelled show which would launch so many acting careers. Great stuff. Keith Richards gets respect for being part of "Exile on Main Street" alone, aside from technical skills as guitar-playing. Ron Asheton gets mention as a great guitarist--but enough on the Stooges. He used to always rank up there on those old Rolling Stone best guitarists lists. (Lower than Jerry, of course.) Mellow listening to Dylan's "Tempest" tonight before the final workday of the week. Yeahh, I was for UNC. Heartbreaker. Peace.
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    Rush
    That's funny, I saw the same dancing silhouettes at the Jethro Tull show many years ago. Yeah, I got into them in '85, so they were past their major creative peak. If 2112 through Moving Pictures were five A+ records, and Signals was an A-, then the rest of that came after were B-, B, and B+ records, with anywhere from 2-4 A songs....if that makes any sense (ok, maybe a couple of C+ records in there, but there were still a few great songs on every LP). Their most recent studio release (Clockwork Angels) was probably the best record they made since Signals; I think if they pared it down to 45 minutes from 60, it could have been an A record. Personally, I don't think they ever should have let Terry Brown go (he was their producer during the golden years). But anyway, when I first got into them, they weren't really playing too much of their great stuff on stage. They smoothed themselves out on synthesizers and all but ran from their past - but they didn't get far, and my worst fear - that I would never hear the classic stuff on stage - never came true. They slowly came full circle, and by last summer, their entire two hour second set didn't contain anything more recent than Moving Pictures. They are the perfect blend of hard and prog rock.
  • Quodlibet
    Joined:
    Rush man too?
    'Course, I'm not the one to say for sure, but having completely worn out my cassette copy of 2112 in high school, I can only imagine that the 2112 in KeithFan's handle refers to the ultimate Canadian power trio. Good lord, but Neil Peart was an amazing drummer and lyrisict. Man, it's been many years since I regularly listened to Rush. ...cue harp music and wavy visuals.... When I was in college, Rush played the StarLake Amphitheater outside of Pittsburgh. Summer solstice. A buddy and I drove over from State College for the show. So there I was, way up on the lawn, floating through the Roll The Bones stuff while waiting for the "real" Rush, when I noticed on the really high wall behind the stage, these huge shadowy dancing silhouettes that were totally in sync with the music and moving in this sort of trancy groovy dance. Being in the state of mind that I was in, I was totally intrigued and mesmerized by said dancing silhouettes, and after pondering on it for some time I concluded that it was some sort of laser light show associated with the band on stage. It didn't really seem like a Rush thing, but I though it was cool nonetheless. Fast forward to the end of the show; my buddy and I are walking through the parking lot, which by then was full of deadheads who, it turns out, were there because Jerry and company would be playing that venue for the next 2 nights (and about which I was completely unaware). Turns out, some of those folks had been grooving to the Rush sound next to the amphitheater wall whilst spotlights cast their shadows high upon the wall, and some were still dancing in the spotlights to the post-concert music blaring over the sound system. Suddenly, I understood why I'd seen dancing silhouettes. Long story short, my buddy and I ended up hanging out with some deadheads in the parking lot, and I remember really digging music that I'd never before given much consideration. Through the foggy haze of memory, I seem to remember a bus coming by and... well, you can probably guess the rest. ~Quod
  • Angry Jack Straw
    Joined:
    Knopfler 72
    Never got into Dire Straits other than a few songs here and there. Decided to go see them with friends in the early 90s. Awful. Yup. Awful. Way too loud. Everyone complaining. Sheer nonsense. Got a chance to see Knopfler again on the All the Road Running tour, sadly without Emmylou. Phenomenal. ABB, Stones, etc. Who cares what they all say. Saw them all live. Listen to them rarely anymore. Just go watch Townsend disappear on stage in Germany back in 81 when he knew he was outmatched. Keith, congrats on your purchase. You will never be disappointed. A great price for a timeless tour. Clued my brother in to the offer as well and he picked up a set. Enjoy.
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    The Deadheads Made Me Do It
    I had to buy a E72 All Music Edition. I already have it, but now that I have the trunk, the temptation to fill it with brand spanking new CDs - more than I can resist. I actually tried buying a backup copy back in Nov or Dec when it was 15% off. You know what came in the mail? 4/7/72 - and only 4/7/72. How I freaked out. Then they said they didn't have it in stock and that it would take awhile to get it from some other warehouse. I guess andoverdeadhead, you had the same experience, as you said you had to wait until February to receive yours. What I don't understand, is why you had to pay $450, since you had ordered it when it was 15% off? BTW there are only two left. I have a feeling there are more somewhere. I've seen these restock on the website before. Keith Richards - one of my favs. Doesn't play lead well enough to ever be mentioned in a "greatest guitar player" conversation. Agree he's in the top ten songwriters, and I would actually promote him to top 5 based on his finesse as a rhythm player and sound innovator (nobody had a tone like him, due to the open G tuning, which he brought to rock 'n roll). Combine that with the massive amount of songs he wrote, and he's got to be weighted closer to top 5 than 10 on some scale.
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July 1978: The Complete Recordings

What's Inside:

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

Announcing July 1978: The Complete Recordings

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

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

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

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

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Appreciate your response. I really go for instrumentals, which is why I have quite a collection of GD Dark Stars, Jams, etc. (Of course Dark Star has a wee bit of lyrics, but I'm used to them & like them.) So when I discover that Hendrix's "Hear My Music" is all instrumental, naturally I'm interested. Seems that it's sold out at Dagger records, and is solely available at inflated prices from third-party Amazons. I went ahead and ordered it today...a single CD for 30 bucks! No problem, I'll just skip buying junk food for awhile till I make up the financial difference. I like to listen to CDs in pairs...so maybe (if the volume levels are compatible) I'll match this Hendrix CD with a certain Ali Akbar Khan CD...
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Probably the most overlooked , but essential member to the Band. Ironic that I just starting watching the Last Waltz. God Bless. Marye. Yes decorum should prevail. However, I must invoke the "Bill Clinton" in that I did not inhale with that cocaine thing.
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I love the Band.. Great call to shout-out Manual's birthday, great talent and multi-instrumentalist and an integral member of the Band. His passing was so sad and unnecessary If you have a few days spare time, I highly recommend reading Levon's This Wheel's on Fire. Rick Denko was another amazing talent with a similar ending tale. Tragic and sad, but they left us with life changing music. Garth Hudson, the other keyboardist, deserves kudo's too. As the oldest member in the Band, and a strong influence as well, he helped shape their sound. I could go on.. but lets focus on fallen angels and keyboard players. As for decorum, agreed. Tomorrow I plan to wear my fancy clothes if I decide to write. I might even shave. Hope that makes for this weekends bad behavior... If I get a haircut can I please have some extra credit? I am in a self imposed period of indefinite time-out for bad behavior. Loved the Spring tour listening comments this weekend. I took some deep diversions.. Perhaps a spring tour story is in order...
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....I believe I started that dark thread. Forgive me. Never meant to offend anyone. Just reminiscing about a topic I really don't remember anyway....
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Along with Richard Manuel (my favorite Band member not named Levon), today I always think fondly of the birth of my tinnitus. April 3rd, 29 years ago, just short of 9pm, I was slammed third row from the stage at the Centrum in Woooooooster, when the finest blues slide player since Elmore James stepped up and delivered such an authentically greasy cover of CC Rider that this 80's white-bread suburbanite pissed his pants. I could have lived with that. But when Ace hit the solo, my left ear burst into flames. Yes, I'm hear to report that my own version of the hell that is tinnitus was fathered by none other than Bobby "Ace" Weir. (While I don't exactly have DNA evidence, I do have the audience tape to prove it. I'd suggest you check it out, if not for the CC Rider, then the wicked Let it Grow/Don't Ease set I closer.) Some people would say I'm bragging, but can I confess something? While I like Bobby as much as the next guy, I have a dream. A recurring dream of laying in a nursing home bed thirty years out, spinning this yarn for my grand kids, and I'll tell them it was Duane Allman who wounded me, not Weir, cause really, they won't know the fn difference. Right? But I'll certainly feel much better about the whole affair.
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Sorry to hear man.. Would it make you feel better if most of us feel tinnitus when bobby plays slide on CC Rider, but it goes away when he picks up his Gibson wide body 335. Sorry to hear of your tinnitus, that's no laughing matter.
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I recently purchased it on bluray and was disappointed that the Jam was not included.I thought that the DVD I watched years ago had a long Jam at the end that ended when the last remaining camera stopped working. Apparently all the cameras overheated after running all day. Can anyone confirm this?
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There's a jam at the end of my DVD version. I would have to believe its on the Blue Ray too. As for cameras overheating, that sounds odd.. It starts w/ I can be released and keeps going.. then the last waltz theme. man.. it looks like I have shell out and get the Blue Ray. On my DVD version, Dylan cant sing so well. I bet on the DVD all that's cleaned up and he sounds angelic. ______________________ Edit: I stand corrected. It took me a half hour to find my buried copy of The Last Waltz, the jam is buried under special features and varies from the jam 1 and jam 2 that I found on YouTube. Why do they taunt us so.
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Was it 420Bandito or Bach who first brought up The Outlaws? Either way, thanks, I picked up the Hurry Sundown album from the library after reading the posts. Daaaaaamn!!! That's some good guitar southern rock and roll! Not typically my thing but I'm loving this album. Deadicated, you're probably right about the Milestones:Kind of Blue=AOM:E72. But I don't have Milestones. Are you going to make me spend all my money on Miles Davis discs? Kidding, of course. Really happy with that ESP purchase that you recommended.
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Thanks Jim.I thought I had thoroughly searched the Bluray bonus features. Will have to check again.
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I have always been a big fan of what my friends & I referred to as "Southern Rock". (Gregg Allman & Dickey Betts have always said they don't understand that term and don't agree with it) But ABB was the King of of it. Yes, The Outlaws were awesome! The Florida Guitar Army could really bring it. It's a shame that several of them have died young.(Where IS Floridabobaloo? Miss him for sure) If you like this genre, or are curious, check out The Marshall Tucker Band. Toy Caldwell, who played lead guitar and wrote most of the songs was an unbelievable talent. His brother Tommy on bass was definitely a frustrated lead guitar player who played the hell out of his bass also. Whenever I saw them, I always said that they way they jammed, if the whole stage had just exploded I would not have been the least surprised. Give "Where We All Belong" a listen and tell me it is not great. I always loved Charlie Daniels. (He is also on Where We All Belong) He is still going strong at 79 years old! Check out his albums Fire On The Mountain or Saddle Tramp and tell me what you think. Great stuff. Other awesome "Southern Rock" bands would include Wet Willie, Grinderswitch, Elvin Bishop, and of course Lynyrd Skynyrd, but only up to the time of the passing of Ronnie Van Zandt. I don't care what Gregg's opinion is. I love "Southern Rock"! Rock on
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that Gregg Allman said "southern rock" is like saying "rock rock" saw that in an interview somewhere along the way
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16 years 4 months
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It's my personal tradition to take a vacation day every year. As I tell my boss, it's my religious holiday.
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14 years 10 months
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I would do the same, but the two teams I want to win are forever cursed. cough cough "Mariners", cough cough "Cubs". 2001...2003...we'll win the whole thingohwaitnowewon't
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bazeball been bery bery good to me. Not a huge pro sports fan, but I loved when Bob Weir broke out the song Kansas City after the Royals won the World Series in '85 The did a decent job on it too!
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17 years 6 months
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I used to be a huge NY Yankees fan. Until they tore down their stadium. Now I can't stand them. Rat bastards.
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redevil - it's as satisfying as Kind of Blue in its way. Milestones > Kind of Blue = Workingman's > American Beauty. Jim - does the name Don Denkinger ring a bell? Kansas City loves him. Dearly.
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New stadium is fine. Looks so much like the old Stadium, and with so many less obstructed viewing seats. Much easier to get in and out of also. Bathrooms are so updated, so much nicer all around. It doesn't rock as hard though when fans start stomping their feet.
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I used to love baseball. Played center field on my varsity high school baseball team; grew up on the Philadelphia Phillies, was 8 years old when Mike Schmidt led them to World Series victory; was 21 when Mitch Williams gave up the infamous long ball to Joe Carter; went to Spring training 2x after college; enjoyed the 2008 World Series victory...but not nearly as much as 1980, and I didn't enjoy watching them play in 2008 nearly as much as the ill fated '93 season. I don't watch them at all anymore. I don't know why the thrill is gone, but I admire all your enthusiasm - enjoy!
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11 years 1 month
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Opening Day in Cleveland (vs. Boston) postponed due to Cold Wind & Rain...actually snow...game postponed till tomorrow at 1:00.Go Tribe!
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Never understood why they didn't get more respect. Prior to the GD, Skynyrd was the defacto band with Free Bird. I always preferred Green Grass and High Tides. Throw in a little Nantucket Sleighride by Mountain or Snowblind Friend by Steppenwolf and I am good. Was a huge baseball fan as a kid. Once the Sox won in 2004, I lost interest. Will watch the Cubs should they make the World Series, but that is about it. Playoff hockey is the way to go for me. Seems like the only sport left where they actually play for the trophy rather than the money.
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12 years 11 months
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Phillies LOSE 6-2 to Cincinnati Just ordered tickets to the April 29th game Phillies vs. Cleveland at CBP this is the very first time the wife is going to the ballpark. Not 20 seconds after I "clicked" complete order the wife asked me "what should I wear"? Wives, gotta love em!!!! GO NOVA!!!!!!!!! I hope Wright coached the boys right!!!!!
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17 years 6 months
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Being the Nephew of Baseball Hall of Famer Chuck Klein, Opening day is always a thrill. Baseball is one of my Three Loves Music Baseball Cars
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9 years 3 months
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Kind of off topic, but it looks like the Spring 1990 box is finally about to sell out in the next week or so. Down to 12 copies left. I couldn't resist and picked up one to keep sealed in my archive.
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Is a soulless dump. when I was a kid my dad could take me to the game beforehand and we could walk down to the field, check out batting practice..now with that awful wall to keep the non 500 a ticket crowd at bay have ruined it. It's a soulless corporate monolith with absolutely zero character. I was a die hard Yankee fan and a season ticket holder for many years, now I would never go unless I get free tickets on business. I hate the new Yankee Stadium. Hate.
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Hate the new stadium even more. Fenway is old, small, dirty and smells bad. But it has character. Those steinbrenner simpletons ruined the franchise. Can't help but laugh every time I see all those empty $1,500 seats behind home plate.
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Not just the greatest baseball movie of all time, one of the greatest movies of all time. Walter Mathau. Classic performance. It would be rated R today. Swearing by kids. Motorcycles with no helmets. Kids drinking beer. Way ahead of its time. Anyone who has kids that play sports today knows that. Well, I guess unless you are one of those delusional parents that thinks your kid is getting a division 1 scholarship and going pro. And that is almost all parents these days. One of the best scenes is when the dad slaps his kid who was pitching. In the next play, the kid teaches dad a lesson. Great stuff.
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I saw it in the theater.7 years old and my folks dropped me off to see it.Hard to imagine parents today doing that.Or letting a 7 year old kid see a movie like that at all. I miss the 70's....... ...and I never saw the new one.Don't want to either.
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....great movie. Cut my teeth on that one. Came out in '76. Matthau chews up every scene he's in. The Sandlot, Field of Dreams and The Natural also come to mind. If you're a Padre's fan, you have my condolences. My Marlin's take the field tomorrow against the Tigers. Verlander is pitching for them. Pray for us....
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Yup. Got dropped off as well. Parents unsure if it was a good idea. It wasn't, but you know what, neither was dropping me off at Animal House. My god. Tatum was hot. Really hot. And how about Villanova. Good for those boys. Sorry southerners, but Roy Williams is slimy. Yeah. Real slimy.
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12 years 11 months
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NOVA!!!!!!!!!!! Now that is how an NCAA Championship game is supposed to end, a 3 point buzzer beater!!!!! NovaStrong!!!!!!!
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....watching baseball. Terrible timing. MLB & NCAA should have gotten together.... ....regarding Tatum. Yeah, one of my first crushes. Her sharp tongue in BNB was eye-opening.
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10 years 1 month
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Given all this baseball talk, and of course acknowledging the Sox's opener is pushed to today due to awesome weather everywhere in the Northeast...I will hopefully make it to the Grateful Dead night at Fenway on 4/28. I have a few tickets but it is also a mere six days after baby#2 is supposed to arrive; this will require some Sixtus-bartering with the wifey... For those interested in some details (sadly the tix are sold out at this point): http://boston.redsox.mlb.com/bos/ticketing/grateful_dead.jsp Play Dead! And Ball! Sixtus
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9 years 6 months
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Very funny underrated movie. Walter Matthau is excellent and plays the part of Buttermaker to perfection. I've always loved the Yankee coach's pregame speech to a bunch of 12-year-olds in a little league game: "I'm not gonna talk about winning, I'm gonna talk about losing, 'Cause if you guys lose this game...each and every one of you...you're going to have to live with it." .
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11 years 1 month
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"It Happens Every Spring," black & white classic where a scientist/pitcher develops a substance that repels wood, and rubs it on the baseball (through a hole in his mitt!) so that the pitched ball literally "jumps" over any swinging bat. Interesting in that: even though the pitcher (Ray Milland) is clearly cheating...we, the audience, are rooting for him all the way.
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14 years 10 months
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all this baseball talk DiP33 is at Oakland Coliseum (some of you say "duh") do the A's still play there, or are they at Google-on-my-Facebook Field or something? heard 10/9/76 over the past few days, finished the last three tracks whilst commuting today 10/10 is next
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14 years 10 months
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TG4theGD "keeps me on this earth" - JG
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13 years 5 months
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Hey Wissinoming.. I was thinking of you when I watched that game last night. Surely will go down as one of the great ones. Tying basketball into the GD isn't that hard.. A few stories come to mind, but my favorite is when Bill Walton talked a bunch of his teammates into heading over the Worcester to see the Good Old Grateful Dead. Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and others were treated to a fine, relaxing night off. I believe they went to the Worcester show in Nov '84. Decent show, standard setlist. Word is they had a great time, Larry Bird on Jerry: "Jerry Garcia was the Michael Jordan of musicians." http://www.celticslife.com/2015/09/the-time-bill-walton-got-celtics-to…
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12 years 1 month
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Maybe not in that order:-) Glad Villanova won, now Larry Wilmore will have to do his show as "Soul Daddy" :-) Saw Bad News Bears with girlfriend in the drive-in back in the day,,, funny movie that still is funny today. Baseball,,,,, 1500 dollars seats!!!!! I really couldn't care less what they cost because I don't go. But I always hear people complain about the price of tickets. The only way the prices will ever come down is if people stop going, leave the park empty for a season and prices will come down. (It's better on TV anyway, IMHO) My two times I've gone stories - first time a buddy said lets go to Yankee stadium for a game, he'd drive cause he knew how to go. So off we go with our girlfriends. Get to the George Washington Bridge and sit on the bridge for two hours! Finally get across the bridge and he's wandering around trying to figure out how to get there. I have no idea, but I'm like Jim it has to be over by those large amounts of lights. We get there and it's the bottom of the 7th. Up, up and up we climb to our seats. I can not believe how small the players look on the field! I see guys hitting these high pop flies and they are not even coming up as high as we are! I was not impressed. After we moved to Dallas my wife suddenly develops a hankerin' (that's texas talk) to go see the Rangers, I'm like oooooooooook if you really want to go. We get there in plenty of time but I can not believe how far away we have to park. In we go, turns out our seats are on the east side of the stadium and the setting sun is baking us. It's like a 95 degree day and even after the sun goes down it's still like 95 and not a hint of a breeze. I sat thru that game with sweat just pouring off me. That was it, NEVER AGAIN I say. And it's been never again since then. I don't watch sports on TV, so I don't need to go see what I don't watch for free. Just my take on sporting events,,, but 1500 dollar tickets?!?!?!?! As my father would have said,,, "they'd hold their hands on their ass a long time before I give them 1500 bucks!"
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17 years 6 months
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I saw the "Bad News Bears" movie when I was a kid, at the drive-in no less. Probably the best baseball movie that I've seen is "Pride of the Yankee's" from 1942, about the life and career of Lou Gehrig. A very sad yet inspirational film classic. Very heavy especially considering the timing in which it was made. Highly recommended.
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14 years 8 months
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Pretty random post here...The great stoltzfus post that said TG4theGD made me think of great GD license plates. Bolo's profile picture used to be SUGREE on a California license plate. Always thought STGR LEE would be cool. Maybe a Maine plate 4EVA DEAD. CBY NEAL...PITB 72...MROR SHTRZ...Guess that's too many letters. Still kind of a fun game.
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9 years 7 months
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Plenty of good baseball movies, but my favorite baseball in pop culture moment was the Simpsons episode where Burns gets a bunch of 80s-90s era players to be ringers on his team. Officer Eddie: (reading Steve Sax's license) Well well, Steve Sax, from New York City. Officer Lou: I heard some guy got killed in New York City and they never solved the case. But you wouldn't know anything about that now, would you, Steve? (Lou and Eddie laugh) Steve Sax: But there are hundreds of unsolved murders in New York City. Officer Lou: You don't know when to keep your mouth shut, do you, Saxxy Boy?
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