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        <title><![CDATA[Pink Floyd, Grateful Dead release unseen footage for quarantined fans]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Pink Floyd, Grateful Dead release unseen footage for quarantined fans</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Maybe this will help everyone feel a bit more comfortably numb.</p><p>Pink Floyd, the Grateful Dead, Radiohead, Metallica and other iconic bands are all releasing archived or unseen concert footage on YouTube to help entertain fans during <strong>the coronavirus pandemic</strong>. The rare videos began hitting the groups&#8217; channels last Thursday, <strong>according to Forbes</strong>, and will continue rolling out on a weekly basis.</p><p>In addition to the short-form videos <strong>Pink Floyd</strong> has long been screening from its archives Fridays at 12 p.m. EST, the British rock group is also now releasing entire concert films. This includes &#8220;<strong>Pulse</strong>,&#8221; a recording of the group&#8217;s 1994 &#8220;The Division Bell&#8221; tour performance at London&#8217;s now-demolished Earls Court venue, available on YouTube on Friday.</p><p>Commenters have already queued up for the virtual concert, with many expressing their excitement in a live chat.</p><p>&#8220;​Tuning guitars so I can play along at home, neighbors are going to love me,&#8221; writes fan Time Graham. &#8220;Gotta find some acid,&#8221; writes another.</p><p><strong>The Grateful Dead</strong> is now hosting a &#8220;Shakedown Stream&#8221; event on Fridays, which began on April 10 with a showing of 1989&#8217;s &#8220;Truckin&#8217; Up to Buffalo.&#8221; The group is also fielding donations for the <strong>MusiCares COVID-19 Relief Fund</strong>.</p><p><strong>Radiohead</strong> opened its archived concert release with a premiere of &#8220;Live From A Tent in Dublin,&#8221; recorded during their &#8220;Kid A&#8221; tour in 2000.</p><p>Metallica has begun its <strong>Metallica Mondays,</strong> featuring broadcasts of previously unreleased, pre-pandemic live shows, and will continue with the weekly streams — in addition to now soliciting donations for COVID-19 relief through the group&#8217;s <strong>All Within My Hands</strong> foundation.</p><p>Starting Saturday, April 18, <strong>Genesis</strong> is revealing five concert films. The group is starting off the series with its 1981 &#8220;Abacab&#8221; album tour.</p><p><strong>The National</strong> has also promised fans rare footage, with money raised going to the group&#8217;s crew, which is out of work since the band&#8217;s concerts were cancelled due to the coronavirus.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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