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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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Ernie5

No cholesterol.

+3668


Submissions

4
The Other One
July 14, 1970
Euphoria Ballroom

ATOMIC! Garcia's subversive wah work only makes the area less safe for the public.
4
Beat it on Down The Line
Nov. 14, 1971
Texas Christian University

Searing version - groovy false start, then Garcia soars like an acrobat. Plug in!
2
The Other One
Feb. 6, 1969
Kiel Auditorium

CRUSH. Hard to believe they brought this intensity and dynamic precision all the time then, but they did! Ace!
7
Bertha
March 31, 1973
War Memorial

Unknown Genre - iTunes. Kreutzmann drives this hovercraft - as he seems to in all of the great Berthas of this time. Look out for the guitars.
1
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
Sept. 29, 1971
Practice Studio

Have always loved the San Venetia tapes - almost like an x-ray of the GD. You can so hear the guitar architecture. So tempted to make that one word.

Comments

St. Stephen
June 9, 1976
Boston Music Hall

Probably my favorite post-69. One of my favorites. Period. Floating on air. Great contrast to the '69 vintage. A treat.
Terrapin Station
Dec. 28, 1979
Oakland Auditorium

Pretty enchanting. This is a very specific period of the Dead with its own kind of juice. They never really sounded like this again. You can hear the space and the dynamics of 77-78, but with (1) Mydland keeping it tasteful and (2) a little more grind. Maybe the new guitar added some girth. + Also such a nice excursion before the bridge - as sweet as any I've heard.
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
May 8, 1977
Barton Hall - Cornell University

When I vote for a song, I'm not necessarily saying I think it's the best ever. Even if I do think this version is the best ever (and it might be), I don't like being told by someone who doesn't share that view that I think so because of X. You really have no idea. + When I first heard this tape in the mid-80s, it was not famous (at least that I knew of). I had already fallen for May 1977 based on a decent SBD of 5/19 a friend of mind had. When I heard this Scarlet>Fire, I recall being blown away by the little details (Weir throwing in a China Cat lick into Fire, for instance) and I still think this version contains everything one could want from the pairing. If the seamless transition is "boring" to some, OK. To me, it's hypnotic. Best ever? No clue here - there are certainly other Spring 77s that give this a run, but this is the one that opened me up to the possibilities of the pairing. + I don't think many (if any) post Spring 77 Scarlet>Fires touch this or the other ones played in April-May 1977. To my ears & taste, these are as close to perfect as I know. After this period (in general), the drums became flubbier, Garcia kept omitting/forgetting the 4th verse, Lesh's bass became muddier and less insistent, and some overall sloppiness often crept in. None of these issues touch Spring 77 for the most part. For my $.
Playin' In The Band
Sept. 15, 1972
Boston Music Hall

Yes - this deserves more rapt attention. The whole show does, but this is such a conversational Playin'. A precision instrument at times.
Tennessee Jed
April 11, 1972
Newcastle City Hall

Standard issue Europe 72 Tennessee Jed, which is to say: beyond reproach.