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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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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

China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
Nov. 19, 1972
Hofheinz Pavilion

Fluid China Cat - Godchaux's in especially sweet form. Torrid transition - has it fucking all.
Bird Song
Aug. 25, 1972
Berkeley Community Theatre

It really shouldn't surprise how sweet and delicious this is given the time & place, but still plenty of unexpected pleasures lurk. As always, the guitars are relentlessly inventive & cool - Weir channeling Wes Montgomery at various points. Garcia channeling Garcia. Fall 1972 might be the peak of his note bending - so artful, emotive, and trippy. And, like most of '72, the group has complete control over all dynamics. Most rock bands who dip into improvising forget the dynamics part (everything is a repetitive build). 12:30 flies pretty quickly in this rendition.
Playin' In The Band
March 19, 1977
Winterland Arena

Still love this Playin' - one thing I noticed recently is just the buoyancy of the group and the crowd. A constant. And the group responds to this great ambience with some killer ambience of its own: patient, spacious, and on the QT. Great Playin' from a masterful show.
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
Sept. 21, 1972
The Spectrum

How'd I miss this one? Textbook China>Rider circa 72 and not in a boring textbook way. Fall 1972 is endlessly sweet. Band at peak, Ex. A.
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
May 8, 1977
Barton Hall - Cornell University

To be fair, I have loved this one since I first heard it - and it was not famous then. At least not as far as I knew. To me, the start, the transition, and the detail make this one absolutely one of the best. My vote for this one has nothing to do w/its fame. It’s famous b/c it’s great, not the other way around. The best? Who knows or gives a shit? I just know that when it’s over, you sense you’ve travelled a pretty epic path.