headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

please login or register.

Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

7
Not Fade Away
June 4, 1970
Fillmore West

Spectacular thrashing jam. Jerry has an agressive metal sound that I like to call the "Dangerous Dead" from the era.
6
Attics of My Life
June 4, 1970
Fillmore West

For a song notoriously difficult to sing, this one comes of beautifully. June 6th is better, but good to hear them in sequence as the worked on it.
5
Friend of the Devil
June 4, 1970
Fillmore West

Hard to figure that this isn't here already: sweet acoustic intimacy and a clear '70 AUD that does it for me.
4
Candyman
June 4, 1970
Fillmore West

Intimate expression of this song's first, acoustic, right off the LP era. A bit slower, but great vocals and 3-part harmonies.
5
Deep Elem Blues
June 4, 1970
Fillmore West

Pure goodness. Warm AUD, intimate sound. This is the gold.

Comments

What's Become of the Baby
April 26, 1969
The Electric Theatre

Hey GDTRFB Era E: this is exactly the heavy trip grow-hair-on-yer-eyeballs dark power Dead I thought it would be. Thanks again. There are probably a few freaked out hippies still recovering from this Bacchanalian masterpiece. Cut from DP, huh? I don't mean to criticize the team players but I call 'chickenshit'. This is 'the Dangerous Dead, enter at your own risk.
Playin' In The Band
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

Misfire or not, this also highlights Playin's role: here it sews together the second set in the deep jam place and sandwiches a wharf rat (!). What were they thinking? Playin's 10/4 meter and open structure allow for such deep jamming. Give this one a listen, it won't disappoint.
Mountains of the Moon
April 26, 1969
The Electric Theatre

Pure beauty and a great recording. Jams sweetly from acoustic into electric without ever jumping fully into Dark Star like they did at the time - maybe a tapecut and missing DS? Not sure why I love this song enough to name myself after it, but I do. Damn she's sweet.
Deal
July 19, 1989
Alpine Valley Music Theatre

I was an 80s head but don't listen to my years so much any more. Rare is the show from this time - after I left the tour in fact - that brings me back to what turned me on so much about the late-era Dead. God damn, this is a solid motherfucking jam showing what they could do when dialed all the way in. Down hill or not afterward, this is the bomb.
The Other One
Oct. 17, 1974
Winterland Arena

Superb. It's got it all, almost as if they didn't know whether they'd ever play it again and wanted the final word on it. Meltdown before first verse, high shredding, Spanish and MLB jams, rocket-fueled scary roller coasters through space... Take a deep breath and dive into the pudding folks.