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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49622


Submissions

4
King Bee
July 17, 1966
Fillmore Auditorium

Pig is in perfect form, the band throbs behind him with intensity and purpose. Pristine recording.
2
Cream Puff War
July 17, 1966
Fillmore Auditorium

A rip-snortin' wild ride. Not as stretched out as the day before, but still an explosive starting pistol at the earliest days of the Dead.
1
High Heeled Sneakers
June 1, 1966
Owsley's House (rehearsal)?

Rare and obscure, on the Archive at gd1966-06-01.136642.watts.sbd.mr.dat48k.sirmick.flac16
2
I Know You Rider
March 12, 1966
Danish Center

Still in its infancy, but listen to Jerry swarming all over it like ten thousand honey bees. Lightning fast, almost a "let's do this for 50 years".
3
Who Do You Love
March 9, 1966
Owsley's House (rehearsal)

Pig is on fire and the band revs to 6000 rpm. Jerry's tone is a shredding crisp fist full of razor blades.

Comments

Its All Over Now
April 30, 1977
The Palladium

Bobby's voice at the Palladium is just perfect and it adds even more to this honky-tonk two-steppin' version. There's something about his mic and mix at this period that brings out richer timbres and his natural melodiousness, not only his growls and howls. Let's give Bobby his due amongst all the other hyperbole about 'peak Dead' from the Spring of '77. This is simply bee-yoo-ti-ful, and with both Jerry and Donna harmonizing the out chorus it makes a case for best ever, for sure.
The Music Never Stopped
April 30, 1977
The Palladium

How new was Keith's synth technology in '77? Strings must have seemed like they came from Mars for the trippin' heads, the bug-eyed, and the two-dimensional.
Around and Around
April 29, 1977
The Palladium

Accelerando !!!! A c c c e l e r a n d o !!!!!!!!!!!
The Wheel
April 29, 1977
The Palladium

Jerry pops the clutch with a power chord to get this in gear before that semi- gets moving up the highway.
Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad
April 29, 1977
The Palladium

The transition is so beautiful. Not to be pedantic, but FoTM had just entered rotation and had only been played five times since being introduced just a month earlier. Scarlet had been played without Fire for all of '74-'76, so the heads would be gobsmacked by the brilliant transition, but not necessarily the cool pairing that we find anomolous today. There are some brilliant standalone versions of Scarlet out there: My favorite is probably June 9, 1976.