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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

7
Let It Grow
July 13, 1976
Orpheum Theatre

Gives you blisters on your fingers just listening to it. Great second bit coming after drums. Solid if not somewhat overlooked show.
8
Death Don't Have No Mercy
Aug. 23, 1968
Shrine Auditorium

A bit shorter and tighter than some, but brilliant, and part of an immortal set of primal blasting power.
33
Dark Star
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

Takes off on you for a deep and weird ride, then goes into a brilliant "The Main Ten" which just kills me its so good.
18
El Paso
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

The boys were in a mellow mood tonight, and this one is the sweet and tearful-cowboy ballad it was written to be.
7
I Know You Rider
Nov. 8, 1970
Capitol Theater

Moody, pensive, and beautifully acoustic. Like no other. Unbelievably beautiful.

Comments

The Other One
Aug. 23, 1971
Auditorium Theatre

Listening to this show end to end and you can tell they were feeling experimental and exploratory all night. The first set is full of swagger, but somehow it seems like they're trading precision for that x-factor, constantly pushing outward and furthur, ready to burst. It comes on strong in the second set and you hear it getting together in the Bird Song before this. Then there's this. It's goes completely off the chain with this monster, all the way out and into places unknown before to music. Then, just when you think it's expanded beyond all recognition, a blue-ribbon landing into a hot MAMU, (pity about the cut), then right back into the beast in totally different space-time. But wait, it isn't finished, and we get the closing Cryptical - five more beautiful minutes of it, slow-grooving us back to more recognizable places on earth while still hammering hard before the mind-settling WR.... This is TOO and the Dead at their highest levels and I can only imagine what it was like for those lucky ones who got to catch it live. Thanks Archive!
Eyes Of The World
Sept. 11, 1974
Alexandra Palace

Could listen to this forever. Fall '74 shows off some of their greatest collective musicianship, and this whole segment from Seastones to Wharf Rat (over an hour and ten minutes of constant creativity) shows it beautifully. They were just burning so very brightly during this phase before the hiatus.... (Plus I dig bizarre electronic weirdness, so for me this represents a special time in the band's history with Ned sitting in.)
Wharf Rat
Sept. 11, 1974
Alexandra Palace

Love this one with its waves against the docks indeed. Check out one of my favorites, May 19th '74, for another beautiful evocation of the background ocean rhythms and sounds as they fade it out. Sonic portraiture at its finest.
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
Aug. 23, 1971
Auditorium Theatre

This show is totally underappreciated on this site. Was it off the archive for a while and unknown to those who haven't picked up the RT? It's the real deal throughout and just has me stopped in my tracks in my tour through '71s. Been stuck here for about a two-weeks. Tight jam, awesome transition, brilliant mix, all cylinders firing. Could go much higher in a crowded field of excellent China-Riders.
Sugaree
Aug. 23, 1971
Auditorium Theatre

Solid and swinging: A superior and sublime submission.