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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

9
They Love Each Other
May 20, 1973
U.C.

Most rockin' version I know. The boys sound big and tight throughout this wonderful show.
18
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
May 20, 1973
U.C.

Really tight and uptempo. Jerry sings through a cold, but energetic and inspired guitar work. Perfect transition into Rider.
9
Playin' In The Band
June 26, 1976
Auditorium Theatre

Complex and experimental around a Stephen>Wheel sandwich. Starts and ends in wild exhuberance, but has lots of spacebugs and dinosaurs in between.
3
The Wheel
June 3, 1976
Paramount Theatre

Was this the first Wheel ever? It rolls just so sweetly - not very long, but quite perfect
10
Scarlet Begonias
June 3, 1976
Paramount Theatre

Very tight, uptempo and deeply grooving. Check out Seamons' matrix for right tape speed. Even Donna's contributino is solid on this one.

Comments

Nobody's Fault But Mine
Oct. 27, 1972
Veterans' Memorial Hall

Went back to the 26th and 2nd of October, which are more often cited as the first NFBM jams of '72. The 2nd has a clearer statement of the melody, leaving no doubt what Jerry was thinking. But this one is much much clearer to my ears than the 26th, just the night before. It doesn't start with a straight statement, though, so may have slipped through the cracks. For those interested, here is a brilliant essay by a deep scholar on "The Dead's Early Thematic Jams", which is pretty cool. http://deadessays.blogspot.ch/2010/01/deads-early-thematic-jams.html
Mississippi Halfstep Uptown Toodeloo
Oct. 27, 1972
Veterans' Memorial Hall

...and the MHUT out of TOO is totally surprising. I can't think of another TOO>MHUT jam any other time. Plus the version stands on its own as a worthy upvote. The Rio section is ultra sweet.
Black Throated Wind
Oct. 27, 1972
Veterans' Memorial Hall

This show starts off a bit rocky, but this song is where the band really finds their groove. Vocals, as mentioned, are just spot on.
Playin' In The Band
Oct. 26, 1972
Music Hall

This is tremendous. This is a stop everything and listen to it now kinda thing. Somehow I'd never heard this one before tonight, but I'm pretty sure I'll be listening to it many many times now... in a row. There's a lot to it, including a brilliant brilliant Phil/Billy duo that would be hard to find parallels to anywhere else. With all respect to Grendel, I would humbly suggest that Billy sounds more like Tony Williams than Buddy Rich here - more channeling Tony's interactive poetry and muscularity than Buddy's fine-tuned engine at 6800rpm. Jerry's re-entry after the duo must have melted down more than one sensitive brain, and is some of his finest acid-washed genes on tape. Time to listen to it again.
The Other One
Oct. 24, 1972
Performing Arts Center

The only reason this isn't much much higher is the fact that it was recorded from the bottom of a full swimming pool. The Philo Stomp (two rounds) and Tiger Jam blowout are just brilliant, and the He's Gone is just so sweet. Great suite, but a tough AUD.