SKU / Catalogue Number
Catalogue Number / SKU: RCV1 728660
UPC / Barcode: 081227805029 / 0081227805029
(2LP Neon Pink Vinyl) – RSD 2026
One quick thing first. The RSD 2026 title is being sold by a lot of shops as Ramones: Live In San Francisco, but the fuller official release title showing up on listings is Summer In The City: Live In San Francisco, 1979. It is the same release: a 2LP set on neon pink vinyl, issued for Record Store Day on 18 April 2026.
As a live album, this looks like exactly what you want from the Ramones. No myth-building, no overthinking, no pointless padding. Just a band tearing through songs at speed, with that blunt, perfect Ramones economy that made them immortal in the first place. The big appeal here is the timing. This show was recorded at the Summer In The City festival for FM broadcast, and it came right after the recording sessions for End Of The Century. That puts it in a really interesting spot: the band were still absolutely the Ramones, but they were brushing up against a slightly bigger, more polished phase without losing the violence and velocity that made them great.
That is why this release matters more than just another archive scrape. The late 70s Ramones were one of the tightest live bands in rock, and a set like this gives you the songs in the environment where they make the most sense. Tracks like “Rockaway Beach,” “Teenage Lobotomy,” “Blitzkrieg Bop,” “Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment,” “Sheena Is A Punk Rocker,” and “California Sun” are not delicate studio constructions. They are impact songs. They are supposed to hit hard, move fast, and leave before the room has caught up. On paper alone, this tracklist is stacked.
From a review angle, the real strength of a release like this is how little argument it needs. The Ramones live is one of the purest propositions in rock music. Short songs, no fat, no virtuoso nonsense, just tune after tune fired out with total conviction. If you already love the band, this is the kind of set that reminds you why. If you are newer to them, it is probably a better way to understand their power than reading a pile of punk history essays. You hear it straight away. The speed, the repetition, the hooks, the attitude. It is all there.
The collector angle is strong too. This is billed as the first official release of the show, on 2LP 140g neon pink vinyl, with Rhino handling the release. Discogs lists the pressing under RCV1 728660, while multiple retailers carry the UPC 081227805029 or the equivalent EAN formatting.