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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49742


Submissions

3
Hurts Me Too
Feb. 8, 1970
Fillmore West

Swamp blooze. Pigpen was well on this night.
4
Black Peter
Feb. 7, 1970
Fillmore West

Starts a bit rough, but the final solo and out chorus builds and builds into a blazing triumph.
6
Sawmill
Feb. 7, 1970
Fillmore West

Enter the pedal steel. Goddamned sweet sounds here. It's unfortunately cut off, but worth every precious second.
4
Turn On Your Love Light
Feb. 6, 1970
Fillmore West

Pure '70 Dead. Like the HH before, this one grows steadily up to the full berserk, rather than exploding from go. Pig/Bobby outro is immortal.
7
High Time
Feb. 6, 1970
Fillmore West

Gorgeous harmonising and soulful singing. A clean, strong version that never drags.

Comments

Truckin'
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

The pace, throb, and intensity alone puts this in a special category. Add the rocking fills that Jer puts behind the driving (truck in') rhythm, the tires whapping pavement sense, and that killerdiller solo mentioned above and hell yeah, this is world class stuff. Ignore at your own peril.
Turn On Your Love Light
Feb. 8, 1970
Fillmore West

Hey Okozmic! Welcome to the site, but really? '74? No Help-Slip-Frank? No Estimated Prophet? No Cassidy or The Wheel? I'm as curmudgeonly an old '70s head as they make 'em, but even I've been known to enjoy a Shakedown Street or a - gasp! - Terrapin Station now and again.... Cheers!
It's All Over Now Baby Blue
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

Wow. In addition to the subtle and heartfelt interpretation of the lyrics, which I've always felt were some of Dylan's best, Jerry rips a killer solo toward the end (07:54). Great great show.
New Orleans
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

Garage band extraordinaire. Good old rock and roll.
Ripple
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

Listen and just try not singing along.