A twenty-CD box set documenting seven complete, previously unreleased concerts from the band’s 1985 summer tour

The Grateful Dead’s archival project has been operating at full speed for years, producing releases that consistently reveal how deep and how rewarding the vault truly is, but the announcement that arrived this week is something genuinely different in scale and significance. A twenty-CD box set documenting seven complete, previously unreleased concerts from the band’s 1985 summer tour is the kind of release that reframes an entire year of the Dead’s history, and the timing of the announcement, arriving in a summer already marked by remembrance, tribute, and community gathering, makes it land with a weight that goes beyond the considerable practical excitement of the music itself.
Before we go deep into what Summer Magic 1985 represents and why it matters so profoundly, tomorrow night brings its own occasion worth marking. Don’s Pick, the Saturday night radio program on The Grateful Dead Live that has built its reputation on exactly the kind of deeply considered, archive-rooted curation that the best of Dead listening requires, airs tomorrow with a selection that could not be more appropriate to this moment. Don’s choice for this Saturday is the Grateful Dead’s July 18, 1972 performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey, a concert that belongs to one of the most celebrated touring periods in the band’s entire history and that carries a specific local significance for the community this program has always served. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
Roosevelt Stadium, Jersey City, 1972: Why This Concert Matters

The summer of 1972 occupies a specific and exalted position in the Grateful Dead’s live history, and understanding why requires understanding what the band had just come through. The Europe 72 tour, the extended spring run through the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, Germany, France, and the Netherlands, had produced some of the most adventurous performances in the band’s history and had been comprehensively documented on a live triple album that introduced the band to a European audience while simultaneously giving their American following the best official live document the band had released to that point. Before we go deep into what Summer Magic 1985 represents and why it matters so profoundly, tomorrow night brings its own occasion worth marking. Don’s Pick, the Saturday night radio program on The Grateful Dead Live that has built its reputation on exactly the kind of deeply considered, archive-rooted curation that the best of Dead listening requires, airs tomorrow with a selection that could not be more appropriate to this moment. Don’s choice for this Saturday is the Grateful Dead’s July 18, 1972 performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey, a concert that belongs to one of the most celebrated touring periods in the band’s entire history and that carries a specific local significance for the community this program has always served. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
Summer Magic 1985: The Most Significant Box Set Announcement in Years

The Grateful Dead’s official site has opened pre-orders for a release that the community has been absorbing since the announcement landed earlier this week, and the more closely you examine what is being offered, the more significant it becomes. Summer Magic 1985 is a twenty-CD box set collecting seven complete, previously unreleased concerts from what the band itself celebrated at the time as their twentieth anniversary tour, the “Twenty Years So Far” run that positioned the summer of 1985 as a formal recognition of how far the band had traveled since its formation in 1965.
The 1985 summer tour is a period that Deadheads with experience in that era have always discussed with a particular fondness that can be difficult to fully convey to listeners who came to the band later through the more widely documented 1960s, 1970s, and early 1990s material. By 1985, the band had passed through multiple distinct musical phases and had arrived at a configuration and approach that was simultaneously rooted in everything they had learned and freshly committed to forward momentum. Garcia’s playing had developed in directions that the more technically demanding work of the early 1970s had prepared him for, and his guitar voice in 1985 carried both the experience of two decades of performance and the creative energy of a musician who had not stopped growing. The rhythm section anchored by Kreutzmann and Hart was at a level of settled excellence that only comes from years of shared playing, and the ensemble as a whole had the confidence of a band that knew exactly who it was.
The “Twenty Years So Far” anniversary context gave the 1985 summer shows an additional dimension of self-awareness. The band knew it was celebrating something, knew its audience knew it, and played with a spirit that reflected both the pride of the occasion and the characteristic Dead refusal to let any occasion become an excuse for complacency. The shows in the Summer Magic 1985 box set were not victory lap performances. They were the work of a band that had earned its anniversary by continuing to mean it every night.
The specific concerts included in the twenty-disc collection are worth examining individually, because each one carries its own context and history within the fan community’s relationship to the 1985 summer run. Before we go deep into what Summer Magic 1985 represents and why it matters so profoundly, tomorrow night brings its own occasion worth marking. Don’s Pick, the Saturday night radio program on The Grateful Dead Live that has built its reputation on exactly the kind of deeply considered, archive-rooted curation that the best of Dead listening requires, airs tomorrow with a selection that could not be more appropriate to this moment. Don’s choice for this Saturday is the Grateful Dead’s July 18, 1972 performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey, a concert that belongs to one of the most celebrated touring periods in the band’s entire history and that carries a specific local significance for the community this program has always served. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
The Numbers Behind the Release

The practical details of the Summer Magic 1985 box set reflect a production philosophy that takes the collector seriously. Only ten thousand individually numbered physical copies are being produced, at a price of one hundred and ninety-nine dollars and ninety-eight cents, which positions the release as a serious archival object rather than a casual retail product. The limitation to ten thousand numbered copies ensures that the physical box set will carry the kind of specific identity, the sense of being a particular object with a particular provenance, that the best archival releases in any medium tend to acquire over time. Standard and high-resolution digital editions will follow for listeners who prefer that format, but the physical collection is the object that will matter most to the collectors and serious listeners who are the project’s natural audience. Before we go deep into what Summer Magic 1985 represents and why it matters so profoundly, tomorrow night brings its own occasion worth marking. Don’s Pick, the Saturday night radio program on The Grateful Dead Live that has built its reputation on exactly the kind of deeply considered, archive-rooted curation that the best of Dead listening requires, airs tomorrow with a selection that could not be more appropriate to this moment. Don’s choice for this Saturday is the Grateful Dead’s July 18, 1972 performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey, a concert that belongs to one of the most celebrated touring periods in the band’s entire history and that carries a specific local significance for the community this program has always served. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
The Broader Context: A Legacy That Keeps Building

The Summer Magic 1985 announcement arrives in a summer that has already produced more Grateful Dead-related cultural activity than any single season in recent memory, and understanding it in that context reveals something important about the current state of the legacy.
The Forever Grateful exhibition at the Haight Street Art Center in San Francisco, with its four hundred archival pieces and its functional scaled Wall of Sound, continues to draw visitors and attention. The companion installation at Golden Gate Park, opening September 5 with a free Grahame Lesh and Friends concert at Robin Williams Meadow, extends that archival impulse into the public outdoor space where the Dead’s relationship with San Francisco began. The Steal Your Face fiftieth anniversary remaster, pressed in custom Grateful Red and Stealie Blue vinyl, offers a parallel archival reconsideration of the 1974 recording that sits at the other end of the band’s career from the 1985 material. The Oregon Country Fair’s all-star celebration of Bob Weir earlier this month gave the community a formal and deeply felt tribute gathering at a location with its own irreplaceable Dead history. The cover band and tribute scene continues to operate at full capacity across every region of the country, from JRAD selling out amphitheaters on the first week of their summer tour to Splintered Sunlight headlining the Stone Pony and planning a free beach show at Pier Village in Long Branch. Before we go deep into what Summer Magic 1985 represents and why it matters so profoundly, tomorrow night brings its own occasion worth marking. Don’s Pick, the Saturday night radio program on The Grateful Dead Live that has built its reputation on exactly the kind of deeply considered, archive-rooted curation that the best of Dead listening requires, airs tomorrow with a selection that could not be more appropriate to this moment. Don’s choice for this Saturday is the Grateful Dead’s July 18, 1972 performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City, New Jersey, a concert that belongs to one of the most celebrated touring periods in the band’s entire history and that carries a specific local significance for the community this program has always served. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
Tomorrow Night: Don’s Pick, Roosevelt Stadium, and the Perfect Way to Begin the Weekend

The right way to enter this weekend, with Summer Magic 1985 on the mind and the broader community’s summer activity as context, is exactly what Don’s Pick provides tomorrow night. Don’s selection of the July 18, 1972 Roosevelt Stadium concert places the current moment in relationship to a period of the band’s history that represents a different kind of peak, earlier and more exploratory than the anniversary-tour confidence of 1985 but equally rewarding in its own terms and in many ways even more unpredictable in what it produced night to night. Read the Full Post on The Grateful Dead Substack!
Planet Drum Circle!

Planet Drum Circle is an invigorating radio show that takes listeners on a rhythmic journey through the vibrant world of percussion, led by none other than Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, two legendary drummers best known for their roles in the Grateful Dead. Broadcasting for an hour every Sunday, this show is a testament to the power of rhythm and the universal language of music.
An old fashioned Hour A Week Good Ole ‘Planet Drum Circle’ every Sunday Morning at 11AM EST!
Every Sunday Morning at 11AM EST
The JGB Radio Show!

Celebrating Jerry Garcia’s Solo Projects with Live Music. When it comes to iconic figures in the world of music, Jerry Garcia is a name that stands out. Known primarily as the lead guitarist and vocalist of the Grateful Dead, Garcia’s influence on the music industry cannot be overstated. However, what many people may not be aware of is Garcia’s extensive solo career, which produced some incredible music that deserves recognition.
FIVE (5) Hours of Live Jerry Garcia Music from His Solo Projects Every Sunday Night!
Every Sunday Night Starting at 9PM EST
The Ace Radio Show!

The Ace Radio Show is a mesmerizing journey into the musical universe of Bob Weir, the iconic guitarist, singer, and founding member of the Grateful Dead. This radio show is a celebration of Weir’s solo projects, showcasing his distinctive blend of rock, folk, and Americana that has captivated audiences for decades.
The Bob Weir ‘Ace Radio Show’ features FIVE (5) Hours of Live Music from his solo projects every week!
Phil & Friends Radio Show!

The Phil & Friends Radio Show is a captivating journey into the musical universe of Phil Lesh, the iconic bassist and founding member of the Grateful Dead. This radio show is a celebration of Lesh’s solo projects and his collaborations with a rotating cast of talented musicians, collectively known as Phil & Friends. Through a curated selection of live recordings, the show highlights Lesh’s distinctive style and his contributions to the rich tapestry of improvisational rock music.
The Phil & Friends Radio Show features FIVE (5) Hours of Live Music from their shows every week!
Every Tuesday Night at 9PM EST
Music Plays The Band Radio Show

The Music Plays The Band Radio Show plays live music by Grateful Dead Cover Bands. Grateful Dead, the iconic American rock band, has left an indelible mark on music history. Known for their improvisational style, eclectic sound, and devoted fan base, the Grateful Dead’s influence continues to resonate long after their disbandment. While the original band members may no longer grace the stage together, the spirit of the Grateful Dead lives on through the countless cover bands that pay homage to their music. In this show, we explore the world of Grateful Dead cover bands and the important role they play in keeping the legacy alive.
The Music Plays The Band Radio Show features FIVE (5) Hours of Live Music every week!
Every Wednesday Night at 9PM EST
Fare Thee Well Radio Show!

Fare Thee Well is a poignant radio show that serves as a musical tribute to the bands formed by members of the Grateful Dead following the passing of their iconic frontman, Jerry Garcia. Born out of a desire to honor Garcia’s legacy and continue the spirit of the Grateful Dead’s music, “Fare Thee Well” showcases the diverse and vibrant musical endeavors undertaken by the surviving members in the wake of Garcia’s absence.
Fare Thee Well Radio Show features FIVE (5) Hours of Live Music every week!
Every Thursday Night at 9PM EST
Don’s Pick Radio Show!

Every Saturday Night, “Don’s Pick” will delve into the extensive archives of live Grateful Dead performances to handpick a show that captures the essence and spirit of the band at their finest with the hope providing new shows & new versions of music by the band. From legendary concerts to hidden gems, Don’s meticulous selection process ensures that listeners are treated to an unforgettable musical experience and will deliver shows not available in Stores or as Live downloads.
Every Saturday Night Beginning at 9PM EST
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The Ace Radio Show is a mesmerizing journey into the musical universe of Bob Weir, the iconic guitarist, singer, and founding member of the Grateful Dead. This radio show is a celebration of Weir’s solo projects, showcasing his distinctive blend of rock, folk, and Americana that has captivated audiences for decades.
The Bob Weir ‘Ace Radio Show’ features FIVE (5) Hours of Live Music from his solo projects every week!
FOUR (4) TIMES DAILY AT 9AM, 12 NOON, 6PM & 830PM EST

Dedicated entirely to live Grateful Dead performances. Radio shows include JGB Radio (live Jerry Garcia), Ace Radio (live Bob Weir), Phil & Friends, Music Plays the Band (Dead cover bands), and Fare Thee Well (post-Jerry shows). Don’s Pick spotlights a handpicked live show weekly, while Planet Drum Circle dedicates an hour to Drums.
The Grateful Dead Live Merch Stand in The Vending Lot!




