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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49672


Submissions

13
Sugar Magnolia
June 24, 1970
Capitol Theatre

2nd ever in a triple Dark Star sandwich. Choral singing, not fully developed but part of some of the best damned Dead you'll ever hear. Believe me.
9
Don't Ease Me In
June 24, 1970
Capitol Theatre

Acoustic version, beautiful and tight. Don't miss the acoustic set in the rush to the late show.
6
Brown Eyed Women
July 25, 1974
International Amphitheater

Energetic and tight with great harmonies and strong soloing.
7
Black Throated Wind
July 25, 1974
International Amphitheater

Damned strong version building up nicely to the towering triumph, "you've done better by me than I've done by you". Strong stuff.
11
Deal
Oct. 2, 1977
Paramount Theatre

Bursting energy ending the 1st set in blazing glory. The shout chorus is outrageously hot. Has to be one of Donna's best nights ever.

Comments

Viola Lee Blues
Oct. 31, 1970
School Gymnasium, S.U.N.Y.

Perfect transition into Cumberland. They turn up the juice, wind up the jam, speeding along from a stroll to a trot to a gallop to a sprint, land in coal country, and never play Viola again. Some say the '60s sound ended when VLB left the rotation. Well if so, they did it flawlessly.
Dark Hollow
Oct. 31, 1970
School Gymnasium, S.U.N.Y.

Great truck drivin' sound. Sounds almost like someone was playing lap steel? NRPS played this show, so it could be, but Jerry's solo is guitar puro. In any case, this is a sweetheart.
Smokestack Lightnin'
Dec. 27, 1986
Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center

Right on 1980sHead. Seems like we were both there that night, so nice to see you again after all these years! This is indeed some of sickest vocal nightmare tricky shit Bobby and Dan cooked up. Peace to you this fine All-hallows Eve.
Hard to Handle
Oct. 31, 1970
School Gymnasium, S.U.N.Y.

They were much tighter than the night before. This one clicks into place right away.
Playin' In The Band
Dec. 27, 1986
Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center

There was still a lot of emotion on the scene here. This was only the fourth show since Jerry had come back, and they were working out new material (WPCtS, Black Muddy River - which we called "black murky reefer") and it still felt like any show could be the last. I saw the three Colosseum shows, this one, and New Years Eve, plus one of the nights in between, but I'm not 100% sure which. I also saw the first JGB show at the Kaiser in October. I doubt that anyone would list these as their all-time "favorite" or "best" shows ever, but my sense at the time was that we'd almost lost the band forever and the fact that they wanted to play for us again in the Bay Area meant that the world spun correctly again.... That sounds dramatic, but being on tour right before the coma left us in a shock that didn't really end until December. As Glynn says, this Playin' isn't going to blow your socks off, but having it frame the whole show, weaving in and out of the entire evening, evoked the deep Dead. We were dazed and delirious, full of joy to have them back. Great memories (and now back to 1970!). Peace.