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FreedomHaul

Grateful Novice

+17074


Submissions

2
Sugar Magnolia
Dec. 4, 1973
Cincinnati Gardens

Bumpin little intro to this beauty.
6
Let It Grow
March 31, 1988
Meadowlands Arena

Great version from Road Trips Vol. 4 No. 2
15
Drums -> Space
Sept. 10, 1991
Madison Square Garden

Heavy (and long) drums, short space, > Dark Star, but it sounds like they stay in Space for the monster post-verse 2 jam.
8
Me and My Uncle
Dec. 6, 1973
Public Hall

Great version. Nice Jerry, nice Keith, emotive Bobby. Sip your bourbon in the desert.
3
Not Fade Away
Aug. 4, 1976
Roosevelt Stadium

Funkiest playing of the intro material?

Comments

Playin' In The Band
May 4, 1977
The Palladium

nothing I've heard from this night prepared me for how weird and exploratory this would get. If you're a fan of beefy, heady PITBs, spin this tonight.
Dancin' in the Streets
May 4, 1977
The Palladium

more exploratory than Barton? Although less hot, it avoids that version's problems. Killer version.
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
May 4, 1977
The Palladium

Short version: if you like this month of these tunes, check it out and up vote. NO WAY 05-13 is better than this; it's ranked higher because of the box set.
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
May 4, 1977
The Palladium

Phil bass rips at beg. of "Scarlet." Bobby plays "China Cat" lick about 3 min in. Several well played choruses from Jerry. Three great drummers with Keith, who was assuredly awake this whole run. This "Scarlet" (pre-transition) likely ranks with Cornell; it probably comes down to a note-by-note of Jerry's solos for me. Worst case, it's still a totally killer version. Transition is considerably better than many of those following 05-08, IMO. Everything just works here. Jerry loses some steam guitar-wise towards the start of the first verse of "Fire," but his vocals have been consistently good this whole Palladium run. Nice peak in the first "Fire' solo. Convinced beyond reasonable doubt that lack of exposure is why this is so low, and why comparatively musically weaker versions from May are so much higher. Jerry flubs next verse, but unlike the godawful "Franklin's" from 05-09 (there, I said it), makes up for it with good guitar playing. Phil makes everyone gives just a bit extra on the potentially repetitious and tedious outro material, elevating even that a step above.
Brown Eyed Women
May 4, 1977
The Palladium

While I fully agree, I would caution everyone not to skip out on the set before this. This is a show that isn't talked about breathlessly only because it's less well-known.