headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

please login or register.

Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49687


Submissions

4
Space
June 28, 1974
Boston Garden

Sea Stones: Space noise electronica with Phil & Ned. Not for everyone, but sends me into well into the interstellar place.
6
Sugaree
June 28, 1974
Boston Garden

May-June '74 might be my top time for Sugaree. This just builds up to so much intensity. Great stuff.
3
Candyman
Aug. 5, 1970
Golden Hall - San Diego Community Concourse

Intimacy levels: Campfire. Acoustic mellow to the point where I feel like just went camping with my favorite band. A treasure.
7
The Other One
Feb. 3, 1968
Crystal Ballroom

Clutch yer nuts and hold on for dear life. Heavy headiness where the squiggly hippies and the madman bikers get massively Dead nailed.
15
Truckin'
Sept. 28, 1975
Lindley Meadows, Golden Gate Park

Explosive jam like they had 11 months of unplayed Truckin's compressed into one.

Comments

The Music Never Stopped
June 9, 1976
Boston Music Hall

"Mad underrated" indeed, as the man above said. What a dream show.
Cassidy
June 9, 1976
Boston Music Hall

Pure beauty. These first shows of '76 telegraph so many new ideas and such a creative moment in the band's history. Imagine all the roll-outs and new material, along with a new sound, stripped down gear, and a technical ferocity following the hiatus (I'm on a big '76 kick right now). Boyz and Grlz, check out this show... you'll dig it!
Cold Rain and Snow
June 9, 1976
Boston Music Hall

Absolute ripper. My theory is that the boys would open with CRS when they were feeling particularly good. There are just too many lightning-in-a-bottle examples for it to be a coincidence. This version has so much love for the sound and pleasure of making a joyous noise, and it signals a brilliant brilliant show to come. Enjoy it heads, if you don't know it.
Cosmic Charlie
June 4, 1976
Paramount Theatre

There's something quite mocking about this song. "Cosmic Charlie" always seemed like a dismissal you might hear of someone who's just a bit too keen on being part of the scene - with that "go on home, your mama's calling you" being a bit too much like a classic insult for a wannabe. In any case, I always wanted them to play it again, and never saw it live. Anyone know the origins of the lyric?
Might As Well
June 4, 1976
Paramount Theatre

As happy a version as you can find, about a happy time. Interplay is perfect here.