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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

9
St. Stephen
June 27, 1969
Veterans Auditorium

Worth it for the stoned giggles after the cannon shot alone. Part of a great '69 show filled with rare gems.
5
Casey Jones
June 27, 1969
Veterans Auditorium

2nd ever, with a long cool intro that sounds a bit like Row Jimmy. This one's a beaut from a show full of great rarities (Slewfoot opener!).
2
Me and My Uncle
June 27, 1969
Veterans Auditorium

Slow, clear version from a beautiful show placed right between the primal psychedelia and the emerging country Dead. Check it out.
6
Turn On Your Love Light
Feb. 20, 1971
Capitol Theater

Buried under some sound quality issues is a 25 minute epic with massive jams and a dollar and quarter Pig rap for the ages.
3
Caution
Feb. 5, 1970
Fillmore West

This will chop you into tiny pieces and put you back together again. Ballsy dark Dead from a cool show.

Comments

The Eleven
Jan. 17, 1970
Oregon State University

Hola deadheadben, didja finish with '70? I'm going through '72, which has highs and lows, but leaves something behind with the funky informality of the early years. Listened to this again and loved loved loved it. Peace, brother.
Knockin' On Heaven's Door
Feb. 25, 1990
Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum

Easy there brothers, there are many versions and we can line 'em up like dominoes, look at each one like votive saints, or something in between, being here now and all that. Is this one killer? Sure. But while you're at it, check out my personal fave from the unknown acoustic Rambler Room show Nov. 17, 1978. This beaut is a forgotten link between the acoustic, (gasp!) 1970 dead and the Radio City Reckoning we know and love and never heard again. Am I wrong? Is there another acoustic gem out there mid-90s? Let me know if you find it, and I'll dig it too.
Crazy Fingers
Feb. 28, 1975
Bob Weir's Studio

More '75 than you might think on the Archive if you dig into the rehearsal tapes. Nice call on the Floyd reference. An "all-muscle" Crazy Fingers is a perfect description of this experimental version - can you imagine if they'd kept this aesthetic and turned it into another white-knuckle hard number like TOO? What kind of lyrics would Hunter have penned? As it turns out, the Crazy Fingers we know and love is one of the most delicate poetic dreamscapes in the entire oeuvre, both lyrically and musically. How funny that they'd be working it through a totally different system. I'm about to embark on a deep '75 vibe... I can feel it coming.
Drums
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Stronger than Dirt / King Solomon's Marbles ?!? Right at 2:00 Phil strums a little pattern that sounds familiar just for about four seconds. Maybe I'm crazy, (well of course I'm crazy), but it sounds like it to me.
Sugaree
Oct. 9, 1977
McNichols Arena

Nevermind! It seems like it's back and better than ever. THANKS HEADS.