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Ernie5

No cholesterol.

+3668


Submissions

1
Cumberland Blues
Dec. 13, 1969
Swing Auditorium

A cozy little delight - hand percussion, contemplation, great stereo drums, and some rip roaring riffage. Comes in under the radar, but worth a visit.
12
Sugaree
June 18, 1976
Capitol Theatre

As much as I love May 77 Sugarees, Spring 76 is where it's at for me. Subtlety, separation, and Garcia's whispery, silver-dipped guitar breaks.
6
Candyman
April 19, 1978
Veterans Memorial Auditorium

1978: Prime weather for Candyman. This performance, like many from then, highlights the bleak world of the narrator. Garcia's break: spidery.
4
Tennessee Jed
Oct. 29, 1971
Allen Theatre

Bubbly, bratty storyboard version. Character & twang for miles. I'd pay to see this band. Two for a tenner? Four please.
9
Terrapin Station
April 27, 1977
Capitol Theatre

This is a very sweet Terrapin. Everyone's fired up to play it. All you need to do is watch the vid to see the pure joy this brings Garcia. Memorable.

Comments

Estimated Prophet
Nov. 2, 1977
Field House - Seneca College

A very crisp, high-energy Estimated that can stand with some of the redwoods from Spring '77. Garcia's coda Mu-Tron monologue is especially fluid - no need to call it a "guitar solo" because its really just a beautiful piece of improvisation, period. It's almost another lead voice taking over for Weir - a new character in the song. And this character has some darkness.
Tennessee Jed
Dec. 9, 1971
Fox Theatre

Very springy, early TJ - Godchaux is a major difference maker. His piano adds body and warmth to an otherwise wiry performance. And I say "wiry" as a positive.
Dark Star
Oct. 11, 1970
Action House

Agree w/Carrion: get past the sorta dodgy recording - (1) there are far worse; (2) this Dark Star is wide-screen. Yet another deep, dark, space age 1970 Dark Star. Super worth your time unless you just can't deal with less than crystal clear recordings (which I understand). To me, the audience lends some sense of what it was like to be there. That's irreplaceable. Wouldn't mean much if it weren't a major Dark Star. It is.
The Other One
March 3, 1971
Fillmore West

A huge fan of '71 Other Ones - and this one is a really good example. To me, it's definitely '71 in spirit, although maybe this performance carries a little bit of the '70 wildness into the proceedings. With just Kreutzmann at the helm, the group is steered into a cleaner, spacier, more jazzbo feel. I've read that they were way more into playing Other One at this point than Dark Star b/c O1 propelled them into different territory - territory they were excited about exploring. Here, Garcia, in particular, seems very happy to ride the wave and let it push/pull him into all sorts of grey, intimate places. And I love the chimey stuff @ 7:30 - Weir playing behind the nut? Almost TC/Lagin-esque. Very large version. Thanks for the rec!
Tennessee Jed
April 22, 1978
Nashville Municipal Auditorium

From the start, you can definitely hear the loving attention to storytelling in Garcia's vocal. Also: this version has a lovely bounce in its step. Playful - like the 1/22/78 version (also a fave).