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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49777


Submissions

6
Tennessee Jed
Sept. 15, 1972
Boston Music Hall

Crisp soloing and clear, limpid lines from the inexhaustible well of musical ideas here. Jed has never been my top song, but Jer just sparkles here.
11
He's Gone
Sept. 9, 1972
Hollywood Palladium

Smooth and cool. C.Miller's cleanup brings out a lush mix that just sounds sooooo good. Great segue into Truckin', too.
11
Sugaree
Sept. 9, 1972
Hollywood Palladium

Smooth as butter, this one. Note for note beauty.
7
Bird Song
Sept. 3, 1972
Folsom Field, University of Colorado

Don't let the murky and C+ sound stop you from this gem. Would someone with C. Miller's phone number ask him about this show, please?
4
Sugaree
Sept. 3, 1972
Folsom Field, University of Colorado

Continues one of the great stretches of peak Dead right after Veneta. Great jam, B- sound quality though.

Comments

Good Lovin'
May 8, 1970
Farrell Hall (SUNY)

Possibly the worst AUD on the Archive, but worth every second and superlative in every other way. No Pig rap, but Jerry just owns it from beginning to end. Idea after idea flows out from the band at an outrageous tempo. Not for the AUDphobic at all. Tape quality is C-/D+ almost pure noise. But the May '70 college tour just after Kent State is as keyed-in a moment as you can find. This isn't just a completist show, but an important document worth your time.
Dark Star
May 8, 1970
Farrell Hall (SUNY)

Possibly the worst AUD on the Archive... and I love every precious second of it, and thank the intrepid Head who thought to smuggle his or her dictaphone into the show to preserve this gorgeous masterpiece. ADVANCED AUD tolerance required. This lovely goes out far and fast and never looks back. Listened to in the context of a sublime college-gym tour around it, and hear this DS as one of the best of the year. Get past the AUD parts and you won't regret it,
Dark Star
March 24, 1973
The Spectrum

Dark Star "inside out". The jam leads into, rather than away from the great theme. 20+ minutes of beauty reaching outward and inwards until it comes back to those mysterious and transitive notes.... Is this the only one like this? Did they ever jam it inside out like this before or after?
Playin' In The Band
March 24, 1973
The Spectrum

Damn, hvd, you're a poet. That sums it up nicely. I'll also say on relistening that this is exactly what I needed/felt when I said "I haven't been listening to any '73 lately" and went a-looking to scratch my itch. This is a perfect example of how the peaking sounded in this era.
Cumberland Blues
March 24, 1973
The Spectrum

To call this energetic would be a colossal understatement. How about outrageously freaking off the chain? How about licketysplit white lighting? Have fun and try to hang on!