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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49682


Submissions

1
The Other One
Oct. 10, 1967
Shrine Auditorium

Wild and reckless - a supernova.
2
Born Cross Eyed
Jan. 17, 1968
Carousel Ballroom

It rocks. A tight first Born Cross Eyed after a pretty rough New Potato Caboose. Love the '68 sound.
6
The Eleven
Jan. 17, 1968
Carousel Ballroom

First version, out of the first China Cat ever. Epic show. Pigpen is on fire the whole night.
4
Turn On Your Love Light
Jan. 17, 1968
Carousel Ballroom

Blazing start to an awe inspiring, historically massive show. It's pure. Pig and Bobby are especially fun during the hocket (vocal back and forth).
9
Born Cross Eyed
Jan. 20, 1968
Eureka Municipal Auditorium

Massive, sprawling, acid rock bursting at its seams. "Primal Dead" bending space-time.

Comments

Sugar Magnolia
June 20, 1983
Merriweather Post Pavilion

Alright so by default I'm a 70s head, (tho toured in the 80s, that's just how it panned out), but occasionally I get turned back on to just what got me on the bus. Here it is folks, and that's just exactly perfect. Bobby's anthropology lesson and his freaky wailing give me the chills: chills that have been running thirty years so far. They performed Sugar Mag so consistently well that it's hard to spot highlights: the song is hiding in plain sight and this one stands out. I missed this show (I was West coast) but I can hear myself there. Goddamn, it's good.
Greatest Story Ever Told
March 31, 1973
War Memorial

Stephen jam is beyond a doubt, starting about 03:04 and going for over a minute. Check out Sept. 28.72 and May 20.73 for similar melodic evocation of Our Saint. Can't say for certain, but I suspect that the chord changes for this section of GSET correspond to Stephen, thus allowing the jam to go there on occasion. This one is freakin' hot, and I'm glad to see it bumped up in the ranks.
Dark Star
July 31, 1971
Yale Bowl, Yale University

Jack-a-straw, according to sellists.net this was the one and only DS->Birdsong of about the 30-odd shows that had both songs. So this magnificent beast is one-of-a-kind, and goddamn, but ain't it grand?
The Wheel
June 14, 1976
Beacon Theatre

Yeah, this is a nice one. The sound and song are ultra-mellow, not rushing along, but not nodding off either... just a slow cruise up that long highway. Plus Donna sounds fucking delicious here: I love those moments where her voice is mic'd right, mixed and blended right, and you can tell just why these brilliant musicians wanted her sound. This is it.
Row Jimmy
June 14, 1976
Beacon Theatre

More love for '76. This one has a strong pulse and blends just so sweetly. Great show all round.