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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49652


Submissions

45
Playin' In The Band
Dec. 19, 1973
Curtis Hixon Convention Hall

Really Heads? Not here yet? 21 minutes of super fine hotandheady jam. Blazing hot, capping off a year of just outrageous Playin' playing.
14
Candyman
April 15, 1970
Winterland Arena

Don't know the '70s versions enough to say "unique", but check this one out for beeeautiful vocals over light-as-light sweet acoustic playing.
21
Cold Rain and Snow
April 15, 1970
Winterland Arena

The boys start the show with all guns blazing. Seems like they'd open with this when they were most massive. Ahhhh, Winterland.
7
Jack Straw
Dec. 18, 1973
Curtis Hixon Convention Hall

The band has come together, the vocals are warm, the solos are sharp, so strap on boys and girls 'cause this show just ignites from here on out....
9
Caution
Sept. 20, 1970
Fillmore East

Great Caution, but absofreakinglutely outrageous feedback into the deep deep space and back. Face stolen, body floating -> Bid You Goodnight. Damn.

Comments

Playin' In The Band
Sept. 21, 1972
The Spectrum

A version I could just put on repeat and listen to all day. Keith is exquisite, and the jam is hot and intense, then gentle and subtle, then hot again, all in 17 minutes, which feels short considering how much they cover. I love the re-entry around 11:50, when Jerry emits swirling borealis sound-beams around the magnetic poles.
Cumberland Blues
Sept. 21, 1972
The Spectrum

Has a loose sparks-flying feel like a coal car with no breaks speeding down the tracks deep into the mine, like the best ones do, but with a biting hard electric feel that is just exactly perfect.
Ramble On Rose
Sept. 21, 1972
The Spectrum

This song always works better for me when it has that bite-down-hard electricity to it. This one does, driving up the hot-wire tension throughout, and never dragging (as some lesser versions do, "this song, it ain't never goina' end" indeed...). This whole show is peak dead in any case. No toss-aways anywhere.
Loser
Sept. 21, 1972
The Spectrum

This show gets a lot of deserving love, but to me this Loser stands out as a particularly strong part of the first set.
Greatest Story Ever Told
Sept. 19, 1972
Roosevelt Stadium

Probably the worst AUD without an alternative source in the whole of 1972. Pity, because they're just absolutely blazing right out of the gate with Bertha, GSET and then that massive Bird Song. With August-September '72 is up there with the most consistent highest quality shredding Dead of any two-month period in their whole history we should hope hope hope for a cleaner set of reels out there - even if supposedly incomplete. (Please and thank you.) I'm no AUD-phobe, but this one will test the patience of even the most hardcore completists.