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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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Ernie5

No cholesterol.

+3673


Submissions

13
Bird Song
Feb. 21, 1971
Capitol Theater

An intimate very early Bird Song - Quartet-styled, which serves this song really well. Also: you can hear the thinking, especially between guitars.
3
Tennessee Jed
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Ho-Hum: Another outstanding 1972 TJ. This gem from the sorta overlooked summer tour. Garcia aces the break, natch. Band - unconscious. Whew! at end.
6
Candyman
June 21, 1976
Tower Theater

From Garcia's cheeky intro on, this graceful cabochon throws a faint, warm light. 1976 elegance w/a sick, raw spider web guitar break.
2
Wharf Rat
March 21, 1985
Hampton Coliseum

First show - I didn't know this gem very well & after this criss-crossy version, I was hooked. Dark & murky.
3
Loser
July 21, 1972
Paramount Northwest Theater

Download Series - An intimate, casual living room Loser. Garcia coming out of the guitar break is divine. Not the actor.

Comments

The Other One
Feb. 20, 1971
Capitol Theater

Following a Drums to die for, they ease into a spacious jam and get quiet enough you can actually hear Pig. Beautiful, dynamic rendition of a sock hop favorite. Band at full mastery - they take as much time as they like b/c the detail is everything! Gets into little nanoworld phases and then back out effortlessly. Grace and control. Friends listening to each other - that's what this is.
Ship of Fools
May 18, 1977
Fox Theatre

This is one of my favorite Ship of Fools. Has the clarity of earlier versions with the emotion and fragility of the later ones. Weir is just Captain Tenille all the way through. Love his playing here.
The Eleven
April 21, 1969
The Ark

Total and massive control over the hovercraft. Some people prefer the Garcia sound of SG through Fender Twin above all others. Listen to this to understand why (even if you don't agree). In any event, Garcia's absolutely flying in this one.
The Other One
Aug. 21, 1968
Fillmore West

Oh, this is rancid! A band almost too tightly wound. The intensity was not probably sustainable, but you can still treasure these shows for that fearsome pace and attention to detail. The second half of 1968 is out-o-bounds Grateful Dead. I mark Exhibit A and offer it into the record.
Dark Star
Nov. 7, 1971
Harding Theatre

1971 Dark Stars sorta never get their due, but they're unique in the way 1971 is so unique on the Grateful Dead Timeline. More intimate than perhaps what they did a year later - a little spacier than earlier versions. This version (especially with Godchaux bringing something glimmering and new to the table) is like a study - and not in a cold, clinical way. Very much conversational GD & great listeners they were. The thematic shifts are natural, unforced, and completely logical. Art rock.