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Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

1
Me and Bobby McGee
March 22, 1972
Academy of Music

Billy's high in the mix, and he drives. A perfect snapshot, with Bobby's sweet young voice in perfect form and a solid driven pulse throughout.
3
Mister Charlie
March 22, 1972
Academy of Music

High-voltage and up tempo shuffle. Great sounding C. Miller cleanup.
3
Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad
March 21, 1972
Academy of Music

They push the energy up and up and up. Special transition into OMSN. An all-round high voltage jamming show. Underrated.
5
Big Railroad Blues
March 21, 1972
Academy of Music

High energy, shitkickingly good. The energy in this is off the charts.
2
Good Lovin'
March 21, 1972
Academy of Music

Pig on a ferocious rampage, the band sizzling hot behind him, and all this in the first set. This show deserves more love.

Comments

The Other One
Nov. 7, 1971
Harding Theatre

Beautiful and hard charging version with a mysteriously perfect segue into MAMU, but it's the outro that just slays me with its mysterious and light-as air melodic jam before the power finale. Strong stuff here, know your dose.
Playin' In The Band
April 24, 1972
Rheinhalle

Good call cgarces! I love this one.
Me and My Uncle
Nov. 7, 1971
Harding Theatre

There are passages in the Dark Star hinting that they knew exactly where they were going with this brilliant TOO>MAMU>TOO sandwich. Keith's honky tonk piano, like it does in the Mexicali Blues earlier is just perfect here, and combined with the heavy trippin-balls Other One vibe makes this a standout version.
Mexicali Blues
Nov. 6, 1971
Harding Theater

Acid carnival, complete with honky tonk piano, wild chaos, and a dubious narrative ringleader.
Comes A Time
Nov. 7, 1971
Harding Theatre

Beautiful version, but it isn't the only time they sang the 2nd "when words come out" verse. It's there in every version from the song's about a month earlier. I think it's really the key verse for to the meaning of the song, and makes me think about times when my anger took me over and left me regretting my actions. Without it, the "feel nothin' at all" lyrics take on a darker sense altogether (in my opinion). I wonder if they took it out when it seemed like the song was a bit long for a mid-set ballad. I just love these early versions in any case.