• 2,067 replies
    Dead Admin
    Default Avatar
    Joined:

    Please note that due to its size and weight, this item incurs higher shipping fees than the standard Dead.net store ship rates. 

    WHAT'S INSIDE:
    Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco, CA (4/5/69) – Cassette
    Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/5/69)
    Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/7/69)
    Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/8/69)
    Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY (2/24/71)
    Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY (2/20/71)
    Fillmore East, New York, NY (4/25/71)
    Fillmore East, New York, NY (4/27/71)
    Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA (9/15/72)
    Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA (9/16/72)
    Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Uniondale, NY (3/16/73)
    Winterland, San Francisco, CA (3/20/77)
    Philadelphia Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA (5/13/78)
    Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO (8/12/79)
    Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI (8/23/80)
    Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI (7/11/81)
    Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT (3/14/81)
    Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA (5/1/81)
    Frost Amphitheatre, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA (8/20/83)
    Greek Theatre, University of California, Berkeley, CA (7/13/84)
    Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Oakland, CA (11/21/85)
    Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Oakland, CA (11/22/85)
    Madison Square Garden, New York City, NY (9/16/87)
    Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, IN (7/15/89)
    Oakland Coliseum Arena, Oakland, CA (12/27/89)
    Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View, CA (5/12/91)
    Capital Centre, Landover MD (3/17/93)
    Capital Centre, Landover MD (9/15/82)
    Boston Garden, Boston, MA (10/3/94)

    Originally Recorded By Owsley “Bear” Stanley, Betty Cantor-Jackson, Kidd Candelario, Dan Healy, & John Cutler
    Mastered By David Glasser & Jeffrey Norman
    Plangent Processes Tape Restoration And Speed Correction
    Custom Keepsake Box w/ A Guide Book By Jesse Jarnow, Producer's Note By David Lemieux, & Essay By The Stanley Owlsey Foundation
    Design By Once Upon A Time

    Limited To 6,000 Individually Numbered Copies
    Dead.net Exclusive

    When the ride begins in '65 at a pizza parlor in the South Bay under another moniker, who would have imagined? When "Who Are You? Where Are You? How Are You?" became "Won't you come with me?" and, ultimately, "Where does the time go?," who would have thought? 60 years on, we're celebrating the Grateful Dead's Diamond Era. Here we go back to the beginning, to the original "Follow," and uncover the wonders of getting on the bus all over again.

    ENJOYING THE RIDE is a sweeping 60-CD collection that maps an epic cross-country road trip along the “Heady Highway” with stops at storied venues where the music, the moment, and the magic of the Dead reliably converged. Spanning 25 years of legendary live performances, this expansive compendium spotlights defining shows from 1969 to 1994 at 20 venues that consistently inspired the band to new heights. 

    With the exception of a few tracks from earlier releases, virtually all of the music on ENJOYING THE RIDE is previously unreleased, with more than 450 tracks and over 60 hours of music. Of the 20 shows in the collection, 17 are presented in full, with some featuring additional material from the same venue. The remaining three — Fillmore West, Fillmore East, and Boston Music Hall — are curated from multiple performances at each venue, capturing key moments on those legendary stages.

    These performances were originally recorded by Owsley “Bear” Stanley, Betty Cantor-Jackson, Kidd Candelario, Dan Healy, and John Cutler. David Glasser and Jeffrey Norman restored and mastered the performances, with select ones using Plangent Processes tape restoration and speed correction for optimal sound quality.

    It's all housed in a custom keepsake box inspired by the experience of traveling from city to city to see the Dead at legendary venues across America. Inside, a beautifully detailed tour guide features liner notes by Jesse Jarnow (author and co-host of the Good Ol’ Grateful Deadcast) and a producer’s note from Lemieux, an essay by the Owsley Stanley Foundation, and more. The set is richly illustrated with photos, including many taken at the shows featured in the collection.

    Due May 30th, this one is limited to 6,000 individually numbered copies and exclusive to Dead.net. We invite you to take this not-so-little piece of the road home.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • gratefulgerd
    Joined:
    Ticket Stubs - Those were the days (I'm glad I made it)

    Just checked some examples, all Frankfurt:

    Rolling Stones: 1973-09-30 (DM 15) = ca. USD 6,50
    1976-04-29 (DM 16) = ca. USD 7,50
    The Who - 1972-08-11 (DM 14) = ca. USD 6
    Ten Years After -1973-01-28 (DM14) = ca. USD 6

    Cheers G.

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    500% increase?

    When I bought records back in the day for 7$ it sure didn't feel like the equivalent of $35

    Never mind the ticket pricing bollocks
    Here's the music I like on CD
    and archive
    oh, and on you to ob as well

  • Cousins Of The…
    Joined:
    Ticket prices w/inflation adjustment

    12/29/1977 $7.00 = $35 today
    12/31/1977 $10.00 = $51

    Jerry Band Keystone 1977 $5.00 = $25
    Dead & Co $600 in 2025 = $115 in 1977 > Nobody would have paid that price back then.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Heavy Metal

    I can't remember when that term began to be used regularly. I do have an article here, one of a number I took out of the N.M.E for posterity, dated 10/6/73. Written by Charles Shaar Murray, it is titled " An Innocent Alone in the Heavy Metal Zone." Here he acknowledges various records from the 60's, but identifies Led Zeppelin as the first definitive heavy metal band. He tells us that Black Sabbath in the UK and Grand Funk Railroad in the U.S.A. were their successors as " Champion Metazoids".

    I must have identified myself as liking what I though of as heavy metal round about then. That included who you might expect, plus Hawkwind with Lemmy, and "Raw Power" by Iggy and the Stooges. The staples were Deep Purple, Uriah Heep, The Groundhogs, Budgie, Status Quo, Stray, Robin Trower, Pink Fairies - even Rory Gallagher - although he alerted me to the blues. Many, many more, too.

    Around 1979 - I think - there was another category - The New Wave of British Heavy Metal, which I really didn't like at all. I went more for punk in terms of heavy rock from 1976, and then moved backward and sideways into more exotic territory.

    But, yes, I also remember how mind buggeringly loud and heavy Black Sabbath were. Deep Purple too. Being there made your hair grow long over night.

  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    Tickets

    by the way, tickets were 6.00 dollars for both of these shows. So glad we went to all those shows in the seventies; to see them all now would cost thousands of dollars. So sorry for today's youth, to see a show today, just too much.

  • PT Barnum
    Joined:
    Ozzy, Golden earring and other musings from the past

    Ozzy, this one hurt, even though I was not related to Ozzy, I feel like I lost one of my family friends. Let me elaborate, having switched to streaming a couple of years ago, I noticed on one streaming channel, that Ozzy's and Jacks World Detour was on, so we started to watch...it's a great show and on the biography channel. Was always a fan of Ozzy so when we found this show, we were already hooked. To see the interaction between Jack and Ozzy and the rest of the family was fun to watch and informative as they then went to all the "bucket list" places in the US that they wanted to see. If you have not seen the show, it's worth the watch. After watching this show (airing right now) we were allowed a visit into the Osborne's home life. Way better than the original MTV series. So happy for Jack and the rest of the clan that they got to do this and Jack decided to film it. Check it out if you can get this channel. Only got to see Ozzy once, it was 50 years ago. Looking back, it was 50 years ago almost to the day July 26, 1975. Great show with the opening band Frampton's Camel. This was before the live lp that made Frampton famous. Having been a fan of Frampton since his days with Humble Pie, and a fan of Black Sabbath, we left in the early afternoon for a road trip to Lakeland, Fl for the show. Frampton was great, just having a ball on stage playing his music, and during his set we drank a mushroom potion I had boiled up and put into a Tupperware drinking container that we had. We smuggled the sauce into the show and partook of the brew during this performance. Wow, what a show. Frampton played with a reckless abandon and had a mile wide smile on his face throughout the show. Starting to feel the brew that we brought; the stagehands began setting up the stage for the headliners. This large sail like banner was lifted up and attached above the band and their gear. This had a large cross imprinted on it, as did every member of the band, with Ozzy wearing 3 crosses and Tony too, decked out in black, with silver crosses beaming up from the stage it was quite a sight. Memory a bit fuzzy after this, as the band came on the ambience changed to a darker almost foreboding atmosphere as the band played, the mushrooms hit and we had a ball, the sound was incredibly loud, sinister and raw, rock and roll baby. in all it's glory. This was 50 years ago, tomorrow.
    Golden earring, what can you say about this band and the rock they played, having just released their second album, Switch, we were ready for this show, also 50 years ago, they opened for Robin Trower. Another great show and having a great love for Trower and curious of Golden Earring, we were there in all our psychedelic glory. The one thing I do remember about this band is the mannequin that they had hanging from the rafters, it was the robot-like mannequin from the cover of their second lp, Switch. This thing took on a life of it's own, and every time I happened to look in its' direction, it had changed position, with an arm or a leg moved into another pose. I didn't stare at the object, but it was something that intrigued me and how it moved, seemingly by its self was a trip. They opened with intro, plus minus absurdio and played all their hits, and the great tune Candy's going bad, a personal favorite. A great band and only a rock God like Trower could top them. Trower was, and is, awesome, but that's for another time. Back in those days, I made it a mission to see all of them, all the great bands, and did, with the Dead being on that list and finally saw them for the first time in May 1977. Everything changed after that day, as a new Deadhead had been born. People say that if you remember the sixties, you weren't there, for me, that decade was the 70's. Fun times, for sure. Back in those days, 50 years ago plus now, we were at a concert of some kind almost every weekend, either to Lakeland or Jacksonville or down south for a show. Loved the laid-back atmosphere of Florida back in the seventies, alas, those times are gone. Via con Dios Ozzy and you too George, love to you both, we will meet again, save me a seat.

  • estimated-eyes
    Joined:
    tickets

    Vguy beat me to it. I have been preaching for years, surely a couple times on these dead.net boards, that we should all squarely blame the Eagles Hell Freezes Over tour for the current state of concert ticket prices.

    Rolling Stones, for example: saw them on Steel Wheels and Voodoo Lounge tours with what would be considered by us to be normal ticket prices and no special 'Golden Circle' tickets and special perks. Just buy a ticket at TM and go to the show. Would have to look at my tickets, but somewhere in the $30 range. Then the Eagles toured... By Bridges to Babylon there were pre-sales through credit card companies, 'Golden Circle' tickets for hundreds of dollars, etc... Now it costs hundreds to see them from the 'nosebleed' seats in football stadiums. I have no idea how all these teenagers afforded to attend Taylor Swift shows.

    That said, touring is how current artists make money today. The GD makes the Top 10 album sales for selling 25k of a Dave's Pick. That wouldn't have been in the top 500 30 years ago. Bands like Tedeschi Trucks Band need to charge decent $ for tickets for this reason-- everybody streams the music and don't buy albums. Do the Rolling Stones and Dead and Co need the money? No, but people will pay it, so.... we are still a capitalist society.

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Ozzy and Black Sabbath

    One of the loudest gigs I ever heard was when I saw Black Sabbath at Union House, the Portsmouth Polytechnic students union building on May 2, 1970. It was in support of their recently released first album. They were so loud and the cavernous ex-Territorial Army drill hall amplified the sound so much that residents living miles away complained en masse about the noise. After that, the City Council banned all gigs at Union House until the building could be soundproofed. I don't think that ever happened. My ears were ringing for days afterwards. It was a truly memorable event, my introduction to live heavy music. The name "heavy metal" came some years later.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Inflation

    Curiously, although it only cost £1.65 to see The Stones in 1973, it cost £9.50 to see them in Leeds in 1982. The latter show was outdoors, but it was only going from early afternoon to about 10.30pm. I would have though The Stones popularity would have dropped significantly between those two dates, but maybe it hadn't as a live draw. They did have a hit single -"Start Me Up" round about '82.

  • simonrob
    Joined:
    Ticket prices.

    January 16, 1971 saw me and my friends at the South Parade Pier in sunny Southsea. We were there to see Dada with Robert Palmer, Yes, who were promoting The Yes Album that would be released the following month, and topping the bill were Iron Butterfly who were joined by members of Yes for a jam at the end of their set. It was a great gig and a great evening, all for the princely sum of £0.60. Those were the daze.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

4 years 3 months

Please note that due to its size and weight, this item incurs higher shipping fees than the standard Dead.net store ship rates. 

WHAT'S INSIDE:
Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco, CA (4/5/69) – Cassette
Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/5/69)
Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/7/69)
Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (6/8/69)
Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY (2/24/71)
Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY (2/20/71)
Fillmore East, New York, NY (4/25/71)
Fillmore East, New York, NY (4/27/71)
Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA (9/15/72)
Boston Music Hall, Boston, MA (9/16/72)
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Uniondale, NY (3/16/73)
Winterland, San Francisco, CA (3/20/77)
Philadelphia Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA (5/13/78)
Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO (8/12/79)
Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI (8/23/80)
Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI (7/11/81)
Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT (3/14/81)
Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA (5/1/81)
Frost Amphitheatre, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA (8/20/83)
Greek Theatre, University of California, Berkeley, CA (7/13/84)
Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Oakland, CA (11/21/85)
Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, Oakland, CA (11/22/85)
Madison Square Garden, New York City, NY (9/16/87)
Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, IN (7/15/89)
Oakland Coliseum Arena, Oakland, CA (12/27/89)
Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View, CA (5/12/91)
Capital Centre, Landover MD (3/17/93)
Capital Centre, Landover MD (9/15/82)
Boston Garden, Boston, MA (10/3/94)

Originally Recorded By Owsley “Bear” Stanley, Betty Cantor-Jackson, Kidd Candelario, Dan Healy, & John Cutler
Mastered By David Glasser & Jeffrey Norman
Plangent Processes Tape Restoration And Speed Correction
Custom Keepsake Box w/ A Guide Book By Jesse Jarnow, Producer's Note By David Lemieux, & Essay By The Stanley Owlsey Foundation
Design By Once Upon A Time

Limited To 6,000 Individually Numbered Copies
Dead.net Exclusive

When the ride begins in '65 at a pizza parlor in the South Bay under another moniker, who would have imagined? When "Who Are You? Where Are You? How Are You?" became "Won't you come with me?" and, ultimately, "Where does the time go?," who would have thought? 60 years on, we're celebrating the Grateful Dead's Diamond Era. Here we go back to the beginning, to the original "Follow," and uncover the wonders of getting on the bus all over again.

ENJOYING THE RIDE is a sweeping 60-CD collection that maps an epic cross-country road trip along the “Heady Highway” with stops at storied venues where the music, the moment, and the magic of the Dead reliably converged. Spanning 25 years of legendary live performances, this expansive compendium spotlights defining shows from 1969 to 1994 at 20 venues that consistently inspired the band to new heights. 

With the exception of a few tracks from earlier releases, virtually all of the music on ENJOYING THE RIDE is previously unreleased, with more than 450 tracks and over 60 hours of music. Of the 20 shows in the collection, 17 are presented in full, with some featuring additional material from the same venue. The remaining three — Fillmore West, Fillmore East, and Boston Music Hall — are curated from multiple performances at each venue, capturing key moments on those legendary stages.

These performances were originally recorded by Owsley “Bear” Stanley, Betty Cantor-Jackson, Kidd Candelario, Dan Healy, and John Cutler. David Glasser and Jeffrey Norman restored and mastered the performances, with select ones using Plangent Processes tape restoration and speed correction for optimal sound quality.

It's all housed in a custom keepsake box inspired by the experience of traveling from city to city to see the Dead at legendary venues across America. Inside, a beautifully detailed tour guide features liner notes by Jesse Jarnow (author and co-host of the Good Ol’ Grateful Deadcast) and a producer’s note from Lemieux, an essay by the Owsley Stanley Foundation, and more. The set is richly illustrated with photos, including many taken at the shows featured in the collection.

Due May 30th, this one is limited to 6,000 individually numbered copies and exclusive to Dead.net. We invite you to take this not-so-little piece of the road home.

user picture

Member for

5 years
Permalink

Oh, to have a whole lotta expendable cash.

user picture

Member for

4 years 11 months
Permalink

GD

To be responsible or not to be responsible

That is the question

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

You got it!
How fast will 6000 copies sell out?
Cheers
And it has 8-12-79 for Hendrixfreak!
(and all the rest of us who were there)

user picture

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

That's a big gulp!

Like forbidden fruit I bit,,,, ok two bites, records and cds!

Now to tell she who must be obeyed.

IBM middle management axion - Easier to seek forgiveness than to ask permission.

user picture

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

for 600 bucks, how about some pictures of the damn thing :-)

Already started building that special shelf for this baby!

user picture

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

.... than Europe 72? That was 22 shows on 73 cd's.

This is only 20 shows.

Pictures be nice!

user picture

Member for

12 years 11 months

In reply to by Dennis

Permalink

I just bought the 78 box and, after a long debate, the MSG box. So I was going to pass on this. And just when I think I'm out, they pull me back in. This box contains my first show 5/13/78 at Spectrum. And another one I attended, Hampton 81. Oh well. It's only money.

user picture

Member for

12 years 9 months

In reply to by delhead

Permalink

Can't play money, sure you could leave it to your kids. But hey, fuckem. THIS is an investment.

Delhead, go for it. Your worth it. If not you, who?

user picture

Member for

3 years

In reply to by delhead

Permalink

I was afraid of something like this.

Do we think this is the only box of the year then?

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

a joint venture, lol. Go together with others to divide and conquer to get only the shows you want. He says (over on the 3-CD page) he is most interested in the early stuff and our R.R. show from 8-12-79. An interesting and brilliant proposal but would require going in with someone of different era tastes. A meeting of the minds between the different generations of Deadheads.
Cheers

"do you think this will be the only box this year?"

IT BETTER BE!!!! :-) My wife ain't made of money!

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

next to the first offering 4-5-69 Avalon?
Is it from a cassette?
Or on a cassette?
Can't imagine them producing cassettes but I'm OK with that if they do.
EDIT: Yes, from Dave's Office Hours chat, the first show is on a cassette! Wow.
Cheers
Sure sign of Spring: The deer ate my daffodils. Dang! They only bloomed yesterday.

user picture

Member for

10 years 8 months
Permalink

This one came out of nowhere, it looks pretty stacked I must say.
But but but where's the GREASE, pre-69???

Not complaining, just asking for a friend.

Be Well People!
Sixtus

user picture

Member for

6 years 4 months
Permalink

I'm in and can't wait!

First time a show I was at being released 3/17/93. Capital Centre was dozed to the gills and the band knew it!!

Alright!

This is big!

Expensive.

Dennis are you in?

Any codes out there?

This is clocking in at $681

user picture

Member for

18 years 1 month

In reply to by DeadVikes

Permalink

....I was at that one.
That's a lot of cheddar. I just got probed a couple days ago!
Draghollow. I use PayPal credit. No interest if paid in off in 6 months. Thats what I'll probably use for this.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

1 year 11 months
Permalink

Why are there no no set lists under "track list" ? Looking forward to this baby - soo many great shows.. BW from a very happy Danehead..

user picture

Member for

3 years 8 months
Permalink

I went to 5 of these shows. Fun times! I wish there was something from 1970, but other then that it looks great!

user picture

Member for

10 years

In reply to by Danehead

Permalink

Indeed!

user picture

Member for

8 months 1 week

In reply to by Danehead

Permalink

Things are too tight for this right now - Spouse lady would freak, badly.

I need more remastered early-years shows though ...

Will have to see if it sticks around long enough -
or perhaps will be able to split it with someone ??
(i.e. that's not usually preferred, as I enjoy having the full physical package on hand)

user picture

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

I thought it meant from cassette master (which threw me), but to give a cassette to us now!?!?

This falls in the trinket realm. They better offer a digital copy of it (by itself, free).

I don't have a cassette player anymore. I think I tossed almost all my cassette after ripping in or replacing with a current digital copy.

Whining here, but I'm sure SOMEONE on these boards will get us a digital copy.

Dave says "3 cds per venue" so that sounds to me like a lot of these are not complete shows, I'm kinda confused about this...

edit: ok SOME of them maybe not complete, looks like the important ones remain intact.

edit again: I stand by my original statement, confused

user picture

Member for

18 years 2 months
Permalink

I really want to get this, but a bit steep and money is tight. Lots of shows I've been clamouring for too.

user picture

Member for

11 years 1 month
Permalink

Anybody found a Discount Code for this Boxtrosity?

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

8 years 11 months
Permalink

I really wish you guys released these as individual shows. The Europe 72 boxed set made sense because that was a full tour, but like the 50 trips around the sun release I want only some of these shows. That forces me to eBay to get them from people who buy the set and sell off the individual shows just to make a profit

user picture

Member for

4 years 9 months
Permalink

Well, on the plus side, there's a bunch of '69, and '71 plus some shows I actually went to during the '80s, a thing that almost never seems to happen. Including one at the Greek, which finally breaks the ice on that strangely ignored venue.

On the other hand: $600.

Also, this thing has got to be humongous. Especially given the warning about higher shipping rates. A potential problem for those of us whose unlimited desire to collect all of this music stands in conflict with the limited amount of space available.

But who am I kidding? I don't see how I can not get this. I'll just have find the money and space somehow.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 3 months
Permalink

Wow, what a surprise! I ordered one. I always order one...

user picture

Member for

13 years
Permalink

How the hell do you create this box set and skip over spring and summer 1990, arguably their strongest period since ‘77?

I know you can argue that a lot of spring ‘90 has already been released, but good god man, May through July 1990 had some epic goddamn shows

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

That installment option is available as per the email announcement.
Cheers
I like HF's divide and conquer idea. Go in with someone who wants different shows than you.

user picture

Member for

8 years 5 months
Permalink

I haven't owned a home audio cassette player in 35 years. How are we supposed to rip the 4/5/69 show so we can actually listen to it? For $600?

user picture

Member for

10 years 10 months
Permalink

in the Seaside (office actually) the cassette is only one and got him that 21st venue in a 20 venue box. I got a fully restored cassette deck (killer 1982 high end Teac) recently for $175+shipping and love hearing all my collection again. If anybody needs it PM me for vendors that do 100% of the required resto, not an "I tested it and it works" guy. I follow two vendors (techs actually) that always seem to have a fully restored decent deck for between $100 and $300 that will get you back there. Obviously you can spend a lot more if you want a Nak Dragon but I'm not THAT into it, lol.
Cheers

user picture

Member for

14 years 4 months
Permalink

Huge thanks and love to Dave Lemieux! Remember - no good deed goes unpunished. What a great way to celebrate GD60. Ignore the comments that include anything other than appreciation and LOVE.
NFA

user picture

Member for

18 years 1 month
Permalink

Would order, I can't, captcha error of all things, years of releases riddled with IT issues, going back at least as far as E72

user picture

Member for

14 years 8 months
Permalink

Every morning after breakfast, the first thing I do is check to see what's happening in Grateful Deadland.
As cousin Eddie once said, "Clark, this IS a surprise".
No way did I see this coming.
Needless to say, I'm in, and like many of you, I will need to do some shelf rearranging.
I was at 5/1/81 Hampton, and Jerry was PUMPED!

user picture

Member for

8 years 9 months

In reply to by Vguy72

Permalink

Ordered! Yes, expensive.

I just had tell myself it will be more expensive when it is sold out.

user picture

Member for

8 years 6 months
Permalink

I have now remitted $680 USD legal tender. Please notify Mr. Jerome Garcia and his esteemed colleagues, Mr. Ron McKernan; Mr. Keith Godchaux; Mr. Brent Mydland; Mr. Vince Welnick; and Mr. Philip Lesh, that an old friend says, "They said that they would play tonight!" This fellow then laughed hysterically and could not seem to finish his thought. However, I am sure that they will understand.

As well, kindly share with the good Doctor Lemieux that I did not wait to finish reading the list all of the included shows before I purchased this box. I don't know where I will store it, but I cannot look a gift horse in the mouth.

I have the honour to remain,
Your humble obt. servant,
-Obeah, a longtime fan of 3/20/77

user picture

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

30 Trips was 6500, plus a few 100s All Music editions.
Grabbed this one mainly for the early stuff, but will stick around for the late shows.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years 3 months
Permalink

Some folks can AFFORD it
Honestly Dave ……since the downloads are available…..lets us pick and choose from it…..
I see only one 90’s show
Guess after the 90’s box …..there were slim pickings…….or after Brett was gone…..why bother…… being retired and on a fixed income…all I can afford is the Daves picks and thats with the $5 dollar birthday bonus……
If I live to be 100 maybe I’ll be able to actually listen to all of the collection…..at this stage of life $600 dollars can go to traveling somewhere on this planet

user picture

Member for

4 years
Permalink

The deer creek show first time there I caught the tour Sullivan stadium thru Greek. What a summer. Psyched for all the 69 Fillmore east and west. Bring it! Use my taper relic TCD5M Awesome!

user picture

Member for

4 years 9 months
Permalink

Amazingly, there’s 5 shows I attended in the ser, including my first show 3/14/81 and my first Cali show 8/20/83, and my first Greek show 7/13/84.

user picture

Member for

10 years

In reply to by 1stshow70878

Permalink

Nak Dragon's still at a premium? Will have to poke around. Would appreciate a DM on your techs, cassette or otherwise. Still perplexed about a cassette? Maybe a trinket, maybe bad recording but want to get it out. Havent had time for office chat yet...

user picture

Member for

17 years 8 months
Permalink

I would have loved it if this box was broken up in section but I know it’s probably not practical. I would love to see 30 trips shows all broken out on nugs.net I think enough time has passed peace. ✌️

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

You know the deal
PLAY DEAD
PLAY DEAD LOUD

product sku
081227813048
Product Magento URL
https://store.dead.net/en/grateful-dead/special-collections/60th-anniversary/enjoying-the-ride-dead.net-exclusive-%5B60-cd%5D/081227813048.html