• https://www.dead.net/features/winterland-june-1977-complete-recordings
    Winterland June 1977: The Complete Recordings

    Winterland June 1977
    The Complete Recordings

    The Shows

    June 7, 1977
    June 8, 1977
    June 9, 1977

    Boxed and Ready to Go!

    Sound the imperial trumpets! Bang the drum! Pop that champagne! Another Grateful Dead box set is comin’ your way! Yes, in the grand tradition of the beloved Fillmore West 1969 and Winterland 1973 boxes, comes Winterland June 1977: The Complete Recordings, a 9-CD box set that is sure to knock your tie-dyed socks off.

    At this point, we probably don’t need to hype you on the glories of ’77 Dead. It was a magical time for the band, which was reinvigorated by a plethora of great new material—“Terrapin,” “Estimated Prophet,” “Passenger,” “Fire on the Mountain”—and really hitting its stride again following the October ’74 to June ’76 performing hiatus. The group spent much of the first three months of 1977 recording their Terrapin Station album with producer Keith Olsen, and Garcia also managed to find time to complete the much-anticipated Grateful Dead movie (which opened June 1, 1977). The third week of April, the band embarked on what most Dead Heads agree was one of the greatest tours ever: 26 concerts in the East and Midwest in a little over a month—an awesome stretch that produced so many great shows, a few of them already released in the Dick’s Picks series and subsequently (and more, no doubt, destined to come out down the road.)

    So when the Dead returned to San Francisco’s Winterland for shows on June 7, 8, 9, they were pumped up and feeling good! They treated their hometown fans to three superb concerts that included excellent versions of much of their current repertoire, from the new combo of “Scarlet Begonias” > “Fire on the Mountain,” to a truly colossal, more than 30-minute “Help on the Way” > “Slipknot!” > “Franklin’s Tower,” “Saint Stephen,” “Terrapin,” “Good Lovin’,” “Not Fade Away,” “The Other One”… too many favorites to mention (you can see the complete song lists here). Winterland June 1977: The Complete Recordings contains every note recorded from the three shows, more than nine hours of prime Dead, all taken from the master analog tapes, restored using the Plangent Processes, and mastered in HDCD by that inimitable sonic tweakster, Jeffrey Norman.

    The nine discs are packaged in a beautifully designed box that includes artwork by Emek (you loved his crazy Winterland ’73 phantasmagoria); a 28-page booklet featuring a wonderful and illuminating new essay by Rolling Stone senior music editor David Fricke (who dubs this a “box of paradise and circus… six complete sets of inspired risk and collective explosion”); lots of great Winterland action shots by noted GD shutterbugs Ed Perlstein and Bruce Polonsky; and a couple of little pieces of period memorabilia we won’t reveal here.

    clicking here. We know you’re gonna dig it! And rest assured, there’s plenty more where this came from: We know you love the box sets; well, we do, too!

    -->

    —Blair Jackson

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  • kevjones
    15 years 2 months ago
    Reply to aaron
    Putting out music is not a thankless job. It's great we can still get stuff on CD, BUT why all the '77 stuff. I know the Betty Boards rock, but $100.00 come on. The packaging for these sets is substandard and I worry about my discs getting scratched before I even play them. In fact, the Des Moines disc from Road trips '74 was scratched, I can't make it through my Big River. Skipped the first time I played, then I noticed that it had a scratch on it. 100.00? Now, as I was thinking about what could be the next release, I pondered something that would be really cool. Release something we have never heard on tape before. I was thinking about the three Festival Express Shows from July 1970. This is an underdocumented time in the Dead Vault and in official vault releases. The tapes defintely exist because the Dead wouldn't allow their image in the movie without getting all of the video and audio footage after completion of the movie. It was all recorded. David Lemieux, get those tapes out and give them to the Pacific Microsonics guys and release it. I still would love the Greek '85 run.
  • aaron
    15 years 2 months ago
    new things to complain about
    Funny comments about complete tours and years, folks. But I also see that despite releasing 3 COMPLETE SHOWS, people still find things to complain about--yes complete shows but why 1977? I had to chuckle. Too many Samsons and Estimateds? Isn't that what Road Trips is for? Oh, what a thankless job putting out the music has become.
  • rrussell8
    15 years 2 months ago
    Not everyone has the same
    Not everyone has the same experience, clearly. I was only presented with one shipping option, $75.00 ! That was before the system refused to accept my order but after it refused to acknowledge my long standing account. This thing, whatever it is, cobbled out of stolen love, is badly broken. Happy Trails
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16 years 2 months

Winterland June 1977
The Complete Recordings

The Shows

June 7, 1977
June 8, 1977
June 9, 1977

Boxed and Ready to Go!

Sound the imperial trumpets! Bang the drum! Pop that champagne! Another Grateful Dead box set is comin’ your way! Yes, in the grand tradition of the beloved Fillmore West 1969 and Winterland 1973 boxes, comes Winterland June 1977: The Complete Recordings, a 9-CD box set that is sure to knock your tie-dyed socks off.

At this point, we probably don’t need to hype you on the glories of ’77 Dead. It was a magical time for the band, which was reinvigorated by a plethora of great new material—“Terrapin,” “Estimated Prophet,” “Passenger,” “Fire on the Mountain”—and really hitting its stride again following the October ’74 to June ’76 performing hiatus. The group spent much of the first three months of 1977 recording their Terrapin Station album with producer Keith Olsen, and Garcia also managed to find time to complete the much-anticipated Grateful Dead movie (which opened June 1, 1977). The third week of April, the band embarked on what most Dead Heads agree was one of the greatest tours ever: 26 concerts in the East and Midwest in a little over a month—an awesome stretch that produced so many great shows, a few of them already released in the Dick’s Picks series and subsequently (and more, no doubt, destined to come out down the road.)

So when the Dead returned to San Francisco’s Winterland for shows on June 7, 8, 9, they were pumped up and feeling good! They treated their hometown fans to three superb concerts that included excellent versions of much of their current repertoire, from the new combo of “Scarlet Begonias” > “Fire on the Mountain,” to a truly colossal, more than 30-minute “Help on the Way” > “Slipknot!” > “Franklin’s Tower,” “Saint Stephen,” “Terrapin,” “Good Lovin’,” “Not Fade Away,” “The Other One”… too many favorites to mention (you can see the complete song lists here). Winterland June 1977: The Complete Recordings contains every note recorded from the three shows, more than nine hours of prime Dead, all taken from the master analog tapes, restored using the Plangent Processes, and mastered in HDCD by that inimitable sonic tweakster, Jeffrey Norman.

The nine discs are packaged in a beautifully designed box that includes artwork by Emek (you loved his crazy Winterland ’73 phantasmagoria); a 28-page booklet featuring a wonderful and illuminating new essay by Rolling Stone senior music editor David Fricke (who dubs this a “box of paradise and circus… six complete sets of inspired risk and collective explosion”); lots of great Winterland action shots by noted GD shutterbugs Ed Perlstein and Bruce Polonsky; and a couple of little pieces of period memorabilia we won’t reveal here.

—Blair Jackson

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17 years 5 months
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please send me a PM with your order numbers and relevant email address and we will try to find out what's what. Thanks!
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15 years 10 months
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Just received my boxed set and, lo and behold, it came with the BONUS DISC!!! Yippee! Even more fantastic music from an incredible tour. Thank you, Grateful Dead Store. I don't know about other's noted problems, but I'm thrilled with your service and have never had a problem except for a few broken cases every now and then. No biggie. You guys are the best. Todd
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17 years 5 months
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A year and half later, I finally had the cash to order this, and what do you know ... a bonus disc. Now that's a bonus.
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9 years 10 months
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The link to the store is broken (it 404s) and I can't find a download version of this in the store or any message that it is sold out or in fact any trace of it ever having existed. Which is kind of a shame - I'm streaming the show from archive.org, but I am broadly in favour of handing over some money instead.
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11 years 6 months
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I think it is sold out. This set re-appeared (BRIEFLY) last fall, and I jumped in and bought it in Nov. 2014. After a while, it disappeared again. (Maybe they just found a few extra sets kicking around the warehouse or something?) I was pleased -- and somewhat shocked -- when my box set arrived WITH THE BONUS DISK. Sorry it seems to be gone again. Seems like a set they might want to "resurrect"
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7 years 7 months
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I hope this set returns at some point, though I'm not counting on it. I'd love to get it as a mate for my Winterland 1973 box. It's surprisingly hard to find at a reasonable price on the secondary market. That's what I get for missing it years ago, I suppose.