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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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grendel

Books and Music

+24523


Submissions

10
Black Peter
Sept. 25, 1981
Stabler Arena

After 10/29/77 this should be your go-to BP. Emotion oozes and Jer shreds the outro.
11
Beat it on Down The Line
March 22, 1990
Copps Coliseum

A breezy bouncin' bubbly Bobby Beat it...best of the 90's.
8
El Paso
March 27, 1972
Academy of Music

Jerry in serious bluegrass mode. Most country-westernized version ever. At the end Phil sez "Thanks, Texans" even tho' they're in NYC. Awesome version
23
Let It Grow
Sept. 19, 1990
Madison Square Garden

Hornsby gets on board in a big way & Jerry jazzes up the jam sections. Weir slashes away & sings w/passion. Strong candidate for Best of the 90's.
4
Desolation Row
April 17, 1987
Irvine Meadows

This song was only as good as Bobby was committed to it, and on this night he was 100% in Dylan-idoling mode. Gorgeous rendeition, lovingly sung.

Comments

Althea
Dec. 15, 1986
Oakland Coliseum Arena

Garcia belts it out (check out "guilty of the same old thing" line), but it's Weir who actually shines brightest w/-brilliant counter-rhythms in this sadly underrated version-..Jerry nails all the lyrics, crushes the end jam and the whole band delivers a tight nugget on Jer's big return show.
Cassidy
Dec. 15, 1986
Oakland Coliseum Arena

Appreciate TheFool reminding me this show is about more than just the outstanding Candyman & the awesome crowd reaction it elicits--this Cassidy is top notch too with fantastic funky fuzz-guitar Weir accents sprinkled throughout (same with the Althea from this show which is also upvote-worthy), plus killer Rhythm Devils drumming, especially on the back end section .Kind of amazing Garcia played this well in his first show back from the coma --lots to glean from in this underrated gem.
Casey Jones
Oct. 23, 1971
Easttown Theatre

Starts with a Looney Tunes theme then rip roars ahead with the engines gleaming all the way , Recently featured on 30DaysofDead and worth an upvote
He's Gone
Sept. 22, 1991
Boston Garden

^^^^Fer sure that's Bruce hinting at the opening riff of Dixie Chicken just a bit past the 8 minute mark when they're starting the "nothin's gonna bring him back" chorus--he plays around the edges of it for a good 30 seconds or so...fun easter egg addition to this A+ version that's ranked ridiculously low on the board here.
It Must Have Been The Roses
April 8, 1978
Veterans Memorial Coliseum

^Probably overlooked due to so many other "big" tunes that get the attention from this excellent show but this Roses certainly is worthy of the upvote!