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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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Ernie5

No cholesterol.

+3673


Submissions

3
Sugaree
June 4, 1976
Paramount Theatre

Another example of how Sugaree thrived in 6/76: Garcia's sweet, mellow, bubbly silver thread guitar and group dynamics both jaunty & subtle. Primo.
4
Tennessee Jed
Nov. 23, 1973
County Coliseum

If possible, a very contemplative TJ. Everyone's in apex '73 form, esp. Godchaux who's mixed fairly high to good effect.
2
St. Stephen
Nov. 5, 1970
Capitol Theater

Of the heavenly 1970 Capitol Theater St. Stephens. Just a beautiful union between audience and group. Killer Stephen! CRUNCH!
4
Here Comes Sunshine
Sept. 26, 1973
War Memorial

Show opener - the perseverence is what really sells me on this one. A struggle, but a worthy one b/c the spoils are lush. Sneaky great.
9
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
May 18, 1972
Kongressaal, Deutsches Museum

Crazy overlooked: A noble, splendiferous C>R in full Europe 72-ness. Patient, exploratory, charming. Driving a distance? Pack this.

Comments

Playin' In The Band
June 17, 1972
Hollywood Bowl

Super focused and yet far far out. Fresh back from Europe. Fresh-ish. Swagger anew in a subtle way. Beautiful Playin' one way or the other. Killer audience. Golf claps included! This band keeps the entertainment coming. Yes.
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
March 5, 1972
Winterland Arena

Are you fucking kidding me? Crazy carnival-beer opening straight into the teeth of the song. This China>Rider is a great example of the treasure trove of between-period GD out there - waiting. This is one great, loose, exploratory, focused little show. This China>Rider even has some weird spooky shit going on. This would be Shirley Jackson's China>Rider. Nothing quite like this version. A real sparkler, this. Ride The Magic Elk!
Tennessee Jed
March 5, 1972
Winterland Arena

Tangy '71/'72 hybrid! Kreutzmann sittin' solo on the drum throne suite for a year - and he seems to have adjusted pretty well. Cool ass show - one of those lesser heard shows between known micro-eras of the dead. 'Course the guitar break is out of it's fuckin' mind. Exit from the break is telepathic.
The Other One
Feb. 28, 1969
Fillmore West

From the opening restrained stereo chaos of the drummers, it's clear this is going to be a whale of an Other One. And it is. Everyone is in supercharged shape and the rendition is both heavy and light on its feet -- something this version of the GD were particularly great at: holding two opposites in peaceful balance and having an amazing time doing it. Thrilling.
Estimated Prophet
Sept. 3, 1977
Raceway Park

This is industry standard - full-blooded and confident. Collectively, they may not have had this song more in the crosshairs. Just Dead perfect.