headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

please login or register.

Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

1
Big Railroad Blues
July 22, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theatre

Hard chargin' driver here. They kicked this one in the pants.
3
Sugaree
July 22, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theatre

A solid and sweet rockin' version. The band is smooth and tight, recording a solid A-
2
He's Gone
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Donna's brand new and sounds good. Sorry haters, but she's on here: Check the sweet outro.
9
Stella Blue
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Powerful and emotional, with great coherency and a tight structure. AUD cleanup in need.
5
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Unfortunate cut in CC, but the Rider is tremendous. Needs a cleanup bad - Paging Mr. Miller, help out please!

Comments

Sugaree
July 31, 1971
Yale Bowl, Yale University

First ever, and it's in full swagger and just sweet rockin'. Ignore the ridiculous audiophobes on the archive: This show is burning up from the first note, and much clearer than all the 10th gen tapes we used to have, so skip it and miss out. Dig?
Me and My Uncle
June 21, 1971
Chateau d'Herouville

Thanks for the kind words, Sleuth, I do love me some '71 Dead.... Don't get me wrong, I love a lot of different years, but something about the earlier ones just keep me coming back for more. For me, the best of '71 has the intimacy and - dare I say it - innocence of the previous year while transforming into the jam colossus of the Keith and Donna era. I haven't really gotten around to a systematic go-over of the years I followed some tours (mid-80s mostly), but I'm going through '71 one show at a time and man, it's worth it. Thanks archive!
Hard to Handle
June 21, 1971
Chateau d'Herouville

Very hot, yet somehow laid-back jam. Bobby and Jer tear it up for ever. What a treat this is. The locals somehow got turned on in Chateau d'Herouville - who'd have figured?
And We Bid You Goodnight
April 29, 1971
Fillmore East

Just absolutely beautiful, this one.
Alligator
April 29, 1971
Fillmore East

I'm ambivalent about this one being so high up in the ranks, but not because it isn't awesome. It is. The jam after the drum work is just spectacular and beautiful, going through so many different phases (Stephen tease at 07:20). It's one of the early foreshadowings of where they were going into heightened technical musicality (the Bird Song from this show shows the same...). I'm ambivalent because its just so totally removed from the fissile psychedelic explosiveness of Alligator as it was at its peak years of '67-'69. Gotta note that this was the last show in the Fillmore East, and maybe a bit of a "farewell run" for some of the old tunes. Anyway, it's beautiful. Peace.