• 1,389 replies
    heatherlew
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    CLICK HERE FOR THE
    ALL MUSIC EDITION

    SOLD OUT

    What's Inside:

    Four Complete Shows on 11 discs
    • 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
    • Sourced from the Betty Boards, transfered by Plangent Processes
    • Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
    • Artwork by Grammy-winning graphic artist Masaki Koike
    • The unreleased book Cornell ‘77: The Music, The Myth And The Magnificence Of The Grateful Dead’s Concert At Barton Hall by Peter Conners, published by Cornell University Press
    • In-depth essay by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether
    • Producer's Note by David Lemieux
    • Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 15,000
    • 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.

    Limited to 15,000 individually numbered copies, 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 Boards 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.

    Due May 5th, we anticipate that this revelatory boxed set 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.

    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.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Kayak Guy
    Joined:
    Reel Flips
    The problem with reel flips and other missing bits of recording, like the late start on Minglewood, is that there was no interleave copy on a 2nd deck like some shows have.The missing material has to be substituted from somewhere, usually either an AUD or a SBD from a close date with the same sound and pace. Patches are the pink slime of the hobby, I just like to know where the patches comes from ;) Most likely from other shows in the set that had already been processed. The book is really well done I should have it finished today.
  • Sixtus_
    Joined:
    Reel Flips
    That is a great question KG and one I was wondering about myself. I recall on one of my early copies of the Cornell first set, I never had a complete soundboard version of the lazy lightning > supplication. So I was really interested to hear this one, and of course it's fantastic. But I was thinking, I wonder where this came from? I'm sure there are other places as well although I think you explained the Minglewood opener elsewhere as being a patch. I am also looking forward to reading that book, once I get some time away from little Rugrats and other creatures requiring my half to full attention. It's actually sunny on the back porch, might make for a nice afternoon. Currently hitting Tennessee Jed from Boston; well into the first set. I absolutely love this show. Happy Five-Seven everyone. Sixtus
  • Kayak Guy
    Joined:
    The Peter Conners Book
    This is a really nice book and fits so well with the set.If you just got the AME or the single show release, this book is a great companion worth buying. Sort of dry, what you would expect from a University Press printing, it has a nice flow that back fills the GD story and tape trading before getting to show itself. It provides the context for the show and factoids that help explain how the event happened at all. If only all liner notes could be this detailed. Well done Mr Connors. BTW has anyone figured out what shows were used to patch the shows where the reel flips are on the Betty reels?
  • deadegad
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Happy Birthday Billy!
    And thanks for the music which brings me joy and raises my spirits when I am down. Blessings to you Sir!
  • deadegad
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Box arrived - no issues thus far.
    My box arrived Friday 5/5 which found its way from Tennessee to New York very, very quickly. Only one disc was loose. No scratches or glue issues. As of now I have not listened to them yet. It is a beautiful box and a marvel to hold and gaze upon. Well done Rhino and Dead.net. Please keep 'em coming!
  • KeithFan2112
    Joined:
    NWScarletFireGuy
    I've had the sound board awhile. Havent received box yet, but on the soundboard, there is a LOUD feedback squelch that precedes the laughter. I always imagined she laughed because it was an "oh man, that loud noise scared the poop out of me" moment. I was also wondering with the new Full Norman release if they would be able to fix the feedback. Sounds like they did, if all you hear is the laughter.
  • ArthurDent
    Joined:
    Got mine, All discs ripped fine and play great
    Arrived on Saturday via UPS SurePost (listed on their website as "Even slower than Ground"). The corners of the shipping box were crushed, but there is like a half inch buffer on each end of the box to protect the inner contents, which were fine. A few discs had slipped, but no damage. One disc had glue on it. How the hell do you get glue on a CD during manufacturing ? I can only think the glue was used to put the liners together and was sloppily applied and when the discs were loaded, stuck to the disc. I use dbpoweramp to rip to 24 bit FLAC, and I was getting distortion on some tracks, I tried re-ripping, but figured out that Windows Media Player can't really handle the 24 bit, and adds distortion. VLC media player plays them fine. I'm impressed, the Cornell show really does sound spectacular. Amazing to get the tapes back and have the technology to be able to put them out in such a good sounding format. Interesting to hear differences in sound between the shows, as well as the variety of set lists. Amazing that this was 4 shows in the space of less than a week, and while they are all relatively near each other, it is still a lot of waking up in one city, getting to the gig, playing your little heart out and then back on the road. Kudos to them for creating the music in that time, and on the back end, the people who are now working to get it released back to the fans.
  • Born Cross Eye…
    Joined:
    Happy Birthday Bill Kreutzmann
    The big 7-0.Cheers to your good health. In your honor I will play the recently released 5/7/77 Boston Garden, Boston, MA.
  • Vguy72
    Joined:
    My guess is....
    ....she smoked a joint prior. Seriously, Donna is just exactly perfect this tour. Check her out during the Franklin's outro in Buffalo and get back to me. Keith on the organ, not piano. Raging....so much good stuff these four showz, it's absurd....
  • NWScarletFireGuy
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Boston Bertha
    Anyone with knowledge why Donna started laughing?
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

8 years 1 month
CLICK HERE FOR THE
ALL MUSIC EDITION

SOLD OUT

What's Inside:

Four Complete Shows on 11 discs
• 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
• Sourced from the Betty Boards, transfered by Plangent Processes
• Mastered in HDCD by Jeffrey Norman
• Artwork by Grammy-winning graphic artist Masaki Koike
• The unreleased book Cornell ‘77: The Music, The Myth And The Magnificence Of The Grateful Dead’s Concert At Barton Hall by Peter Conners, published by Cornell University Press
• In-depth essay by noted Dead scholar Nicholas Meriwether
• Producer's Note by David Lemieux
• Individually Numbered, Limited Edition of 15,000
• 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.

Limited to 15,000 individually numbered copies, 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 Boards 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.

Due May 5th, we anticipate that this revelatory boxed set 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.

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.

user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

I know it's off topic but if there are any Son Volt fans out there...New album that just dropped on Friday is Awesome.
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

I like Son Volt thanks for the heads up, one of my favorite songs:Tear Stained Eye
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 7 months
Permalink

Great run of shows in 76 The Beacon and Capital theatre run is great with the best Mission in the rain on the 18th would make an awesome box set
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

So I saw the opera "Salome" last night in Los Angeles. It was my first time seeing it and I loved it. Salome is one of the first operas I listened to when I first started listening to opera some 30 years ago. This was the first chance I've had to see it live. Its about 90 minutes and there's not a dull moment. A pretty lurid story. It's got nearly everything: lust (check), jealousy(check), religion (check), incest (check), necrophilia (check). The final scene is chilling. This production had full nudity for Salome's dance of the seven veils. Sweet! The audience gasped at the nudity. Come on folks, it's 2017, not 1917. As for the upcoming box, I'm really excited. I'm one of the lucky few Deadheads who has never really heard 5/8/77 or any of the other shows. Sure, I've had a great copy of 5/8/77 for more than 30 years, but I never really listened to it. Maybe I listened to Scarlet Fire a couple of times only to decide "phooey- it's overrated". I'm looking forward to a deep dive into these shows! The "Morning Dew" seems to rank up there with the Europe 72 versions- something I never thought possible for anything post-hiatus. Great to have FloridaBob back with his old avatar! Dantian too!
user picture

Member for

11 years 3 months
Permalink

stand alone release also, but who on earth came up with that ? 20.000 blu-ray set and 20.000 dvd set of the fare thee well. the second the FTW show ended both sound and audio was online being shared like crazy. even during the show it was. phish heads arent buying that. they got it for free bump up the LIMITED EDITION units for these CLASSIC GRATEFUL DEAD releases Rhinos. anybody have info for 1969 performance Feb 19, 1969 from San Francisco ?
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

If by February 19th, 1969 you mean the tape the circulates as 06/16/1968 that is supposedly misdated, the real date 2/19/69.. I have it and have listened to it. Its interesting. I'd have to fire up the lawn mower to settle the misdating issue though, and would you believe it.. the Psilocy-flux Capacitor is malfunctioning. Some Phish fan tried to run it on dried chanterelle dust :D
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Gollum, Excuse my English, I'm French. I heard hundreds of times the concert of May 8, 1977. Scarlet> Fire that you found "overrated" is certainly the version I prefer. The jam starts very, very gently. You have to listen. In fact, one must really make the effort to listen, otherwise it seems to be the inconsistent work of an orchestra under Valium. It's quite the opposite ! It is a musical lace of extreme delicacy. It is both light as air and deep as the whole history of music. In a state of grace, each member of the Grateful Dead unfolds a thread, and the group weaves a multicolored, magical fabric. Without hurrying, each turn, each musician will gradually transform the design of the stuff, and suddenly the listener realizes that he is elsewhere - yes but since when? It was so subtle, we did not see anything coming ... And before and after the jam, everything is so well played, everything is so well built. One feels such a presence among musicians that night, throughout the concert, with rare prowess and summits! And I who loves above all the European tour of 1972, the version of Morning Dew of this May 8, 1977 is the most beautiful I know.
user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month
Permalink

It think it was KGB operatives posing as a Phish heads.Because all Phish heads are just posers anyway, right? Hah, funny. This shit just writes itself. :) No offense, Senator. We thank you for your service.
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

It happened the same day as the Bolo abduction, but there's no reason to think the two incidents are related.
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

I will blow this quote.. but I think its in McNally's book. That of David Crosby who referred to Grateful Dead improvisation as mid-air, real time sculptures. Works of art. As for Cornell being over-rated? There's so much hype around the show its hard to say it is not deserved. I always interpreted comments of hype vs. hyperbole to mean not that Cornell is over-rated, but more this is what they did night after night.. Perhaps there are many shows that are as good as Cornell. In other words, the hype, legend and lore is deserved.. its a great show, but there are a lot of great shows and arguably many that are as good, perhaps better. Fair statement? Anyway.. great post, I had to chime in and support it. That Scarlet Fire is one of the great ones.. and I've never met a Morning Dew I did not like. If anyone out there has not heard Bonnie Dobson's original, its worth knowing at least where this song originally came from.
user picture

Member for

9 years 1 month
Permalink

It's on the pedestal where it belongs.But it's a big pedestal and there is room for other shows too. Like many people posted a few weeks back, it was the best sounding cassette tape in the collection and the show was smokin'! Eventually other good sounding cassettes came along, and eventually I was getting metal cassettes that were 1st or 2nd gen from DAT, but some were shows where the band sounded like an orchestra on Valium (great analogy Alain). I'm ready for this Box.....but May 5 is a long way away. Heinz ketchup song: "anticipation, it's making me wait" Deadbase 50: I thought it was sold out but it's on this site for $89.99.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I totally agree with you, JimInMD. Many Dead concerts are "the best". Cornell is one of those (and not the least). When I listen on December 31, 1972, it is the best concert I know. When I listen on August 27, 1972, May 19, 1974, or the first concert I attended (May 4, 1972), it is always the best concert. And there are so many others ... Thank you for the original Morning Dew!
user picture

Member for

9 years 10 months
Permalink

Excluding the initial ordering fiasco, this is the first REALLY GOOD NEWS of 2017! Many thanks to everyone involved in the process, and I look forward to TAKIN' A STEP BACK come May!
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

Bertha from Buffalo gets a lot of attention on Heady Version. Never heard it. Like Gollum, I've had these dhows, but don't lite to them. I did check out Scarlet / Fire, and it sounded hot, no doubt; I just didn't find it to be leaps and bounds above others - bu that could change once I hear the Full Norman a binch of times. There was also a time when I listened to the 3 Morning Dews from Spring '77 in order a few times (5/8, 5/22, and 6/7). They were all great, I recall, and I believe the closing flutter of guitar strumming went on a bit longer at Cornell; however I don't remember feeling like it was that much better than the other two. But that being said, I've still yet to give Cornell an extended study, and I know shows grow on us with repeated listening. I'm hoping that Cornell ends up having the best version of every song played there, by the time I'm into it full boar. Will Brown-Eyed Women really top DP 29, DaP 1, and DaP 12? Tall order, but I'm hoping. Will I find something exceptional about Estimated Prophet that holds a candle to the 1978 versions, which IMHO are much better on a good night than their '77 counterparts. Will I enjoy St. Stephen? I've never really enjoyed the post-hiatus versions as much as '69-'71. They're mostly throwaways in my mind, neither transformative nor exciting. If I listen to the Ladies and Gentlemen's version side by side with any other post-hiatus vesion, I'm always floored by '71, and bored by post-hiatus...but I'm hopeful for Cornell. I have a feeling the magic will be similar to DaP 1, which is how 5/5 was described: sum is better than the parts of the whole. Not sure if my comments came off as critical of Cornell, but if so, what I'm really trying to say is that I sm really looking forward to it, and that hope it delivers in spades! I'm really looking foreward to Buffalo. Help / Slip! / Franklin is such a kick-ass opener, and the rest of the 1St set is full of my songs. The 2ND set Cones A Time im interested in, and even the Sugar Mag / UJB is supposedly much better than other '77 renditions. I think I'm going to enjoy Boston a whole lot too (I hear the Mississippi Half-Step is one of the all time best, and I think we get a rare '77 Wheel, which is one of my favorite post-hiatus performed tunes). Jimbo - I also love DaP 18. It truly realizes the full potential of that year. I would say it's in my top 5 Dave's Picks. I find the shows hit or miss in '76. I felt 30 Trips missed, for me at least. Very flat sound and I guess flat performnce up until end of disc 2 / and parts of disc 3, where I recall some cool jamming.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

....all Phish heads are posers? Lol. Some maybe, but not this guy. Slept in this morning. Going to see Ween tonight at the Brooklyn Bowl. Had to rest up. Big fan of Gene and Dean and I have never seen them. That ends tonight....
user picture

Member for

7 years 9 months
Permalink

I love the fact you're in Paris digging the Dead.I wish I was watching the old guys play boules in the Luxembourg Gardens today, and then over to the Place de Contrescarpe for a beverage or two. Maybe down to join the young folks by the river later..........
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

8 years 3 months
Permalink

That was a really good and interesting description of the Cornell Scarlett/Fire. I should take some English lessons from you. Those Scar/Fires and Morning Dews from Cornell are my favorites too, and are mostly what makes Barton Hall unusually good for me. Like Keith said also, I find the post '71 St. Stephens to be a bit ponderous, and just lacking the crackling edge of the earlier ones, though still plenty worthy on 5/8. I find that there are certain and a limited number of Dead tune versions that transcend what is normally just music to me, and become what seems to me more like a journey, or a place they take you along to, which can vary from listening to listening. Not really in a trippy way, but this place is rare and built inside the mind, and goes beyond the normal listening experience. I think the first time I experienced this was the Dark Star sequence on one side of my early LP of Live/Dead way back when. It doesn't happen every time I listen to those type of tunes' versions, but when it does, it's what makes this band different than any other to me. As much as I like a lot of different versions of Scarlett/Fire, when I listen to every note and phrase, and loudly with earphones locking out other distractions, the Barton Hall version is the one that brings this to me most uniquely. Of course, for others on this board, your mileage may vary.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

A Parisian Deadhead greets you. You seem to know Paris. When I attended my first Dead concert (at L'Olympia in Paris), I was an 18-year-old boy. I am now an old man who sometimes walks in the Jardin du Luxembroug. At my next walk along the banks of the Seine, I will think of you.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I find your post very interesting. There are certain interpretations of songs that, for me, go beyond music, which are not only very good music, but awaken something rare in my mind - but not systematically. A bit like a mystical experience. For me, the pieces of Cornell that we talked about are sometimes open doors to these magical moments. As for my English, I use Google's translation tool!
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

I'm very surprised that this five show box set is not sold out by now. I am sure it will be worth the money and time it took me/you to finally purchase it. I find it interesting reading all your comments. At 70 I have learned, to certain degree, to sit back and smell the pot...I mean...roses! Anyway, I am sure that when we all receiver our box sets we will savor every note. Also, It is nice seeing people, from all over the world, commenting about purchasing/listening to the dead. Is Cornell the "best" dead show ever? Who really knows. When I put on a dead show I just sit back and "enjoy" it with a good bowl of pipe tobacco, in one of my dead hand carved meerschaum pipes, and a good glass of beer/scotch. It lets me forget about the last election and all the "other" stuff going on which I have NO control over. Music is a good way for me to clam my aging body down and look forward to The Dead playing at Saratoga this summer. Mr. Pete---------> aging hippie
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

Looks like the people who come up with the numbers actually do a pretty good job. One of the most desired shows on sale for 21/2 days and not sold out. Doubtful there are many serious collectors that don't know about it. In addition the actual show isn't limited. Maybe OMG there's not as many I must have everything fanatics as we fanatics thought
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

A small sidebar with a misleading title. First.. great posts all day, I must say inspiring, educational fun reads and a common vibe between that cant help but bring a hopeful smile to the faces of all that read. I had a big, probably 150 year old Maple tree go in my front yard and I just got done dismantling it via chainsaw (always a little scary). Tragedy narrowly averted. I come in to read several great posts on a couple of these threads.. a few of you missing from some time. Then I turn on the TV to take a break and without changing the channel there is my alma matter, the Terrapin's playing the Badgers on the only real sport I care about, college basketball. Back to the riding mower Phish fan controversy.. agree, Senator.. Phish is a great band. The poser comment and the Phish reference was just a rouse to see if there were any Phish fans that overslept this morning. Clearly the riding mower tampering occurred late last night and we were looking for clues.. evidence of people out late last night and sleeping in today. I think we have the psysilo-flux capacitor just about fixed now.. so long as we don't use substandard fuel (seems to run best on liberty caps), time travel should be within our grasp.. I see by the post below (BMI Bullshit) that the Russian Hacking on this site is back. Stay away, Vlado.. we will not let you take back our Betty Boards! This is a fair warning.. Hands off our Betty's. And please don't click on that stupid link. Edit: Damned Badgers made sport of the peaceful turtles.
user picture

Member for

10 years 2 months
Permalink

Happy Sunday folks. Was just curious, prompted on a post a few pages back, on how it is much to our benefit that the Dead recorded all these performances, and in such good quality. Got me thinking, I know the big 24-track recordings were an expenditure, especially back in the early days, but how about stuff like these Betty Boards? Was there a big additional cost for their effort to do that? As far as I know, she ran here own reel to reel rig tapped off the main board, and would mix it separately via headphones while also doing sound for the hall. I guess there's the cost of the media, which may have been the worst part, I'm guessing. I would think any popular band today, or those not even quite so popular yet, should be recording every show. Especially these digital releases (I haven't partook in many but I know Wilco, Pearl Jam, Springsteen, etc, offer alot of shows), you'll have money for some mastering but not alot of other overhead, besides again, the media/storage. Anyways, just kind of cool.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I'm surprised this hasn't sold out yet, but thank god I got in before it did. Just got back from Mexico, and to some great news too. It's hard not to be giddy after watching another gripping version of Ahab's, err I mean Dave's seaside chat. And was that a rogue russian submarine over Dave's right shoulder? This 4-show box is going to be legendary. But almost more exciting is whats yet to come. 100s of reels back to the vault!!! There's so much good stuff coming out us completists can barely keep up. But boy do I like to try. I love following all of the discussion on the boards. I could talk about the dead for hours and its reassuring that there are other ones out there. Time to take the dog for a walk and spin 4-2-73. Til next time...
user picture

Member for

12 years
Permalink

Less than 500 left
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

4.2.90 Omni5.30.92 Las Vegas Ween - Chocolate and Cheese Ween - Quebec Ween - Shinola Vol 1 . . One must prep
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

Great to see Mr. Pete on this or any thread.I always look forward to scrolling down and seeing his name with the arrow and then "aging hippie". Probably my favorite sign off. Mr. Pete into aging hippie then back into Mr. Pete. The only poster to perform the rare aging hippie sandwich. Hbob has a great sign off too with the "rock on' Only saw one post from him that didn't have it. He was in an argument with someone and left it off. Probably didn't want that person to rock on at that moment. Doc has a great sign-in with the "mornin' rockers!" Greeting. That should be trademarked. Vguy has a cool style with the dot, dot, dot to end his subject line and then again to start his comment. That is SO vguy and should also be trademarked. Wissinoming has an awesome sign off. Happy Sunday, Deadland! Always brings a smile. Moses Quasar always signs off with "take care, folks!" Awesome. Other random thoughts and nuances: JiminMD's always positive vibe. Always a pleasure to read. Keithfan's naming of the picks based on artwork (example: "skeleton skater") David Duryea's awesome avatar FloridaBobaloo's original handle is back and that's a great thing.
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

I can see that argument, especially as one of simple fatigue. Plus there were only so many people there that night, and so many people saw so many shows, including shows on that tour, but not Cornell, or saw shows that were released long before, and have Dick stating that they were far superior to Cornell. I think Dick was definitely in the fatigue category of fan, because he must've been plagued by that question from the start of his tenure. And that only got louder as the Bettys leaked out in the late 80s, where now everybody seemed to have a copy in pristine sound quality of a show that had been getting raves since it was played. For me, I got into the Dead just after high school, and the cd I got was Cornell set II. I had some Phish tapes and cds and some String Cheese, and some ABB. The only tape I had that sounded anywhere that good was the ABB opening set for 2/14/70, and that was because Bear taped it. Cornell blew me away with the extremely high quality recording. The mix is better than one finds on releases like At Fillmore East or Live at Leeds, and the playing was certainly at the same incredible level as The Who and Allmans at their respective peaks. I love how someone mentioned Cornell, and 77 overall, sounding dull and studio-like in its perfection. I get that the Dead most people by 1977 had seen were not anything like perfect, that their songs, while not really hot or miss, could have clunker versions from time to time. I find the near perfection of Cornell to be a stupendous feat. Especially now that I'm in a few bands, and knowing the challenge of nailing every part of every song as a unit, but also adding in the extreme improvisatory nature of the Dead, and you add in tightrope walking above sharks. There are still miscues in Cornell, even in Fire as Jerry forgets a line, and in St Stephen when Donna comes in a moment too soon, but in the grand scheme, this is a nearly perfect group-mind experiment. My favorite solo by Jerry ever is the Scarlet solo, he just nails every part of it with such gentle phrasing and fantastic dynamics, and it all culminates in the band hitting a crescendo perfectly together before he eases them back down into the Wind and the Willows play tea for two! If my first tape had been Veneta, I would probably say it's the greatest show they ever played and Cornell is second. As it is, I favor Cornell, even though it doesn't go as far out there, and Veneta has all time versions of Dark Star, China-Rider, Playing, GSET, Sing Me Back Home, and there's now a great dvd (except for pole guy), something in me just says that Cornell show is justifiably ranked as the pinnacle. It's definitely more accessible for a newbie than 30 minutes of acid-infused Dark Star from 8/27/72. As to there being now less than 500, I think that proves the point of this release as July 78 is still available, May 77 the first one took about 9 months to sell out if memory serves, and Spring 90 TOO sold out last fall. Also, I've had Bettys of the other shows in this box since 2000 or so, and they never sounded nearly as good as far as straight mix goes as Cornell, so I'm hoping that the fully Normanized versions will allow me to enjoy them as deeply as Cornell. I don't mean to say they sound bad by any means or that the shows aren't in the same league, but whoever mastered the Cornell disc I initially got, found a stupendous mix. When I got the rest of the show, it was Rob Eaton's BERTHA mix and it didn't sound as loud or full, and that's what I had for Boston and Buffalo, so come on May! I wish I could nap for a couple months and just wake up when they arrive...
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

....actually it's dot, dot, dot, dot. Four. My crazy reckoning behind that is that there is always something that comes prior and after my comments. A neverending thread....I'm a stranger to myself....
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

... that's the way I always took your posts.Always open ended with room for discussion.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Looks like this will be sold out within hours.
user picture

Member for

7 years 9 months
Permalink

Yes, I love your city. I've been many times and have strayed far offf the tourist paths. But I can linger in Montmartre or the Musee de Orsay for hours happily.I've got some videos on YouTube from my adventures, page is. Seminole24dude. I won't bore you but I am a huge lover of Paris. Enjoy the music and your strolls.
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Spoiler alert! Link to Boston 5/7/77 included, mixed by Rob Eaton, this might pique your interests too much for those abstaining prior to delivery. Proceed with Caution! Also, I love this review was written 1/3/17. Maybe by Bolo or someone with knowledge this was coming down the pike? Keithfan avoid the temptation to check out the massive Mississippi Half-Step from 5/7/77, for it will unseat your favorite from Dave's 1. https://archive.org/details/gd77-05-07.sbd.eaton.wizard.26085.sbeok.shn… Reviewer: Mind Wondrin - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - January 3, 2017 Subject: 1st show of trilogy, always compared to 2nd Where's those time machines they promised us by 2010 back in 1970? If they existed how many people do you think would be hoping for a miracle outside this show? What a show for which to have a Bertha source (let alone an Eaton AND a Miller!) - first night of The Holy Trilogy. Everybody already knows these are three-in-a row, often-ranked-Top-10 shows, top to bottom, and perhaps the most famous 3 back-to-back dates (admit it and go back to your 74s and your 72s), so I'll just point out a couple things that formed my opinion here. The trilogy is weighty due to the fame of the meat in the sandwich: Barton. But there are two other equal or better three-in-a-rows in '77: 12-27>12/30 5/19>5/22 This show is the one (of the three) with the equipment problems that causes large gaps between songs. This hurts the flow and therefore the energy compared to Barton and War/Buff. If that weren't the case, this might have been a better show overall than Barton. But it would have been too hot, spinning the planet onto a new plane of existence (so we're probably lucky in that respect). The streak from Peggy-O to MNS is one of the greatest in the giant history of the band. There is no equal to this MNS, it's just A+. There's no better Samson, though there are a dozen that tie. The trilogy: 5/7/77 - A- More highest points, if a little less consistent and flowing 5/8/77 - A- Most consistent show but with fewer highest points 5/9/77 - B+ Least consistent, still with big high points Not that ranking is a necessary exercise - you have all three, you listen to them annually and apply them as salve for life's ailments. You don't master them, you simply live in the same time/space as them. You cogitate alongside them, ruminate, live inside them, lay on their couches and occasionally dust in their corners. Sometimes you take them out to dinner and they do the same. When you're too baked, they drive. They remind you when it's 4:19 and are always up for a road trip. Same as you do with 5/21/77 and 5/22/77, the best two back-to-backs ever (both A+). 1st Set: A- 2nd Set: A- Overall = 5 stars Highlights: Peggy-O, Big River, Minglewood Blues, Half-step Mississippi, Music Never Stopped, Samson & Delilah, Friend of the Devil, Estimated Prophet, Eyes of the World, Wharf Rat, U.S. Blues SOURCES. The Bertha sounds perfect but also a bit processed. The Miller is probably truer-to-source but not as mastered (for balance, etc.) though it's too hot in the bottom end, making Phil thud a bunch (as is the SBD). The Eaton is only slightly rougher. They're all perfect but I use the eaton.wizard because Phil has truer note frequency compared to the boomier Bertha (though it's not near as boomy as those mastered-for-earbuds Download Series). It's nothing you can't correct for with your EQ. DustTizzle - cuz "Fennario" and "Peggy O'" are the lyrics. It's real name is The Bonnie Lass o'Fyvie.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Bought this with a visa gift card I got for christmas, when I look at the balance it's already been charged (154 to Warner Music Group). Anyone else have a charge on their cards for this yet? I only worry because the balance available after this transaction is less than the cost of another box set and wouldn't want to have a clerical or banking error cause me to miss out on the box if they were to try to charge it again at the time of shipping. If any of that makes any sense. Looked through the customer service page on here- says they don't accept Visa Gift Cards. Should I be worried? It already took the amount off my gift card. Wish the customer service line was open today... Thoughts?
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

....yeah, one could say those tunes are one of them, or you could focus your attention on the Half-Step, GSET, Loose Lucy, El Paso, Stella from DaP 21. I am humbled by those five....
user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

Listened to it on the drive back home today, and that show had stellar versions of a lot of great songs, Looks Like Rain was exceptionally good and fairly light on the histrionics. The exceptional sound quality of the tape helps for the quieter moments like the hauntingly beautiful China Doll after a blistering Eyes of the World. I skipped the weirdness jam after Here Comes Sunshine for the sake of my wife, having already subjected her to the entire show thus far, even the fairly out there Playing in the Band, but she loved the And We Bid You Goodnight. We followed up with some Jerry Band Live Vol 7 from 1976, she was not impressed by the Stir It Up, nor was I, a good indicator why it was so rarely played perhaps.
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

I don't believe I've seen you post before, but clearly you've been a regular, judging by your post about several folks' characteristics. Would love to hear your Dead year preferences or just which releases you've been into lately. In case you missed it, the subtitle I came up with for DaP 21 is "Recommendations From The Dead", due to this Dickinson Latvala quote I read about the Boston Garden show: The version of "Eyes of the World" from 4/2/73 - Boston is one of the best, as are versions of "Greatest Story Ever Told", "Big River", "China Cat => Rider" and "Playing in the Band". But the highlight has to be the JAM segment following "Here Comes Sunshine" Seldom do the subtitles come as effortlessly, but this one felt perfect. Coincidentally, the other Dick Latvala title that also came effortlessly, was for his favorite Europe '72 show, Rotterdam, 5/11/72. I simply call it "Dick's Pick"
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 7 months
Permalink

Yep and looks like they got it right.The most asked for release over 25 years goes 3 day and still isn't sold out. Now it's up to the do I really want it all. Everyone who HAD to have it has their confirmation numbers
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

7 years 9 months
Permalink

Where is the best place either in this forum or anywhere on the internet to talk about the current dead shows your listening to? Just trying to listen and be constructive at the same time.
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

I post once in a while but I definitely read everyone's input everyday.I actually decide what to listen to a lot of the time based on suggestions that I get from right here. My favorite era changes all the time.... (4 dots as an homage to vguy) I know that sounds wishy-washy but it's true. '69 - '78 and then skip to '89 - '91 - that's the bulk of my listening. I will go on a '77 binge and them for some weird reason, get totally hooked on Spring '90. It's one of the things that I love so much about the Dead. The eras can be so different. Right now, I'm still really stuck on DaP 21. Part of the allure of this one is the fact that it's WAY better than I thought it would be. Kind of like going to see a movie and not really knowing much about it, then being blown away when it's done. I'm not sure why either... I had a perfect soundboard for years but never really listened to it like I am now. The full Norman is real and it's spectacular.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 9 months
Permalink

I am in for this release same as the first May 77. I had been thinking that the first May 77 release was still on sale at Christmas -- long after is release -- that this would sell as a faster but similar pace. Boy was I wrong! I was afraid that I would not get home in time yesterday to order it before it is gone. Wow this one is going fast.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 1 month
Permalink

Digging DaP 21 more and more with each passing. I think it's the best Box of Rain I can recall, and something about that Eyes is just smoking.
user picture

Member for

16 years 4 months
Permalink

'grateful dead society' is a cool facebook group. has grown to 8000 or so members, rapidly! there's lots of kind sharing of fun stuff there...
user picture

Member for

10 years 3 months
Permalink

It's great, isn't it? I had a feeling we weren't getting a bum steer when Dave talked up the big ones, like Playing, HCS, and Eyes, but to also get something special in an everyday song like Casey Jones is a story in itself. Jerry plays it like it's the first and last time anyone's ever gonna hear it. So yeah, if the closer Casey Jones is that good, you know the rest has got to be special too. I'd like a day with just this show and DaP 16.
product sku
081227935153