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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49777


Submissions

7
El Paso
Nov. 30, 1973
Boston Music Hall

Fast and fun, the crowd really digging it. Great show in spite of some sound quality issues.
15
Playin' In The Band
Oct. 27, 1973
Indianapolis State Fair Coliseum

Trippy explorations at lightning speed with cool MHUT>Big River sandwich.
6
Mississippi Halfstep Uptown Toodeloo
Feb. 22, 1974
Winterland Arena

Nice groovy outro. Great show, good vibes.
31
The Other One
Feb. 23, 1974
Winterland Arena

Gets real out fuurther and faster then into a Help-Slip preview in the jam. Great interplay between Phil and Jerry.
8
The Music Never Stopped
Feb. 28, 1975
Bob Weir's Studio

Rehearsal, no vocals, brilliant explorations of the song in development. Great insight into the boys' collective mind.

Comments

Not Fade Away
May 8, 1977
Barton Hall - Cornell University

Agreed with Whiskeyclone: It all comes together nicely here.
St. Stephen
May 8, 1977
Barton Hall - Cornell University

Damned good post-hiatus Steven, but the best? I just can't see it, not that 'best' is ever objective. More energetic would be 22 Jan '78 (hot stuff!), but for my stolen face I'd say any '69 Dark Star>Steven>The Eleven is as close to the Dead's ultimate essence as anything. Also check out 12-13 Oct. '68 for some phantasmogoric psychetropozebraosity straight from Mars that can yank you out of '77 and slingshot you into the prima materia.
Deal
May 8, 1977
Barton Hall - Cornell University

Ok, I'm a big pre-hiatus fan and all, but this is just a damned fine version. No question, Barton is a great show.
Morning Dew
Jan. 17, 1968
Carousel Ballroom

Rippingly good. Jerry's solos and vocals over the emerging '68 sound just blow this one over the top.
Dark Star
Dec. 18, 1973
Curtis Hixon Convention Hall

Really beautiful version, with a unique, but short MLB 'round about 8:00 or so. So many different lyrical and rhythmical evolutions throughout, and a glorious trip into the unknown realms incorporating a blown speaker in what 15 years later might be called a midi-jam.