headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

please login or register.

FranklinTowers

Drummer

+1785


Submissions

2
Ramble On Rose
Nov. 15, 1972
Oklahoma City Music Hall

I tend to prefer these earlier versions when it was bouncy and didn't overstay its welcome...
1
Promised Land
Nov. 15, 1972
Oklahoma City Music Hall

Kicks off the second set in style after a stellar first set!
2
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
Nov. 15, 1972
Oklahoma City Music Hall

Kind of shocked so many songs from this show hadn't been nominated...top-notch '72 IMO, and this China>Rider is no exception...
1
Around and Around
Nov. 15, 1972
Oklahoma City Music Hall

Jerry and Keith both go off!
1
Deal
Nov. 15, 1972
Oklahoma City Music Hall

Big fan of the '72 "Deal"'s...they 'go down' in a hurry.

Comments

Drums
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

One of the better, tighter two drummers versions I've heard!
Terrapin Station
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

quinn_76 is right that Terrapin offers less opportunity for differentiation from one version to the next. Having said that, this version is my favourite by a fairly significant margin. "Goldilocks" tempo, well-sung, well-played, tight, dynamic, powerful, ethereal.
Bertha
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

Usually not a fan of the slower post-hiatus versions, but this one is cooking!
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

My all-time favourite version from my favourite post-hiatus show. Unlike some other great versions, all three components (Scarlet, transition, Fire) are off the charts on this one. Energetic Scarlet free from lyrical flubs with an awesome solo, silky transition until the "duck quacks," which I LOVE, and an epic Fire. And as ronbee mentions, the transition from Fire back into the Scarlet outro at the end is perfect as well. Jerry isn't losing any steam at all, he just decides abruptly he's had enough and steers the band through the smoothest u-turn of all time into a tight Scarlet outro riff to close it out.
Dark Star
May 18, 1972
Kongressaal, Deutsches Museum

Feels like you're floating in slow motion, and I too noticed the underwater feeling deep in the jam.