headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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merryjerry

wacked

+6595


Submissions

16
Help On The Way > Slipknot > Franklin's Tower
Sept. 19, 1990
Madison Square Garden

A big version. Listen as the baton gets passed without missing a beat.
5
Big River
Sept. 19, 1990
Madison Square Garden

An A1 performance that just improves with repeated listenings.
5
They Love Each Other
April 13, 1983
Patrick Gymnasium, U of Vermont

A bull's ass in fly season and the boys on this one are both TIGHT!!! (Although tight might not be the correct word for an awesome TLEO.)
19
Brokedown Palace
Sept. 28, 1972
Stanley Theatre

While not without imperfection, this version gets at that misty quality central to the ethos of the tune.
69
The Wheel
Feb. 3, 1978
Dane County Coliseum

A thin slice of sublime cheese in an earwateringly delicious sandwich: EP>Eyes>Playin'>Wheel>Playin' Reprise.

Comments

Morning Dew
June 27, 1984
Merriweather Post Pavilion

Beefy yet not without nuance. The final solo is more reflective than bombastic. A very good version.
Comes A Time
July 26, 1972
Paramount Theater

Excellent. Full of pathos: Jerry's singing nails it. Features some nice guitar playing, too. I love how Jerry seems to just slip in the first lyrics to this one amidst the ashes of an impressive 'Dark Star'.
Dark Star
July 26, 1972
Paramount Theater

Great pick! Despite the fact that it includes all of the lyrics, this one ain't great because of the singing; rather, it's great because of the playing: a nice, dreamy intro leads into the lyrics, after which it seems as though we'll get a typical meltdown but instead we get Billy and Phil, then Keith comes in, followed by the guitars--and we're off into a nice melodic jam that eventually dissembles into an abstract portion that is more tiger noir than acid freakout meltdown...and then the reprise. Mid-summer '72 is something of a hinterlands for that year, but this version is one more reason why '72 was a great year.
China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider
May 12, 1981
Veterans' Memorial Coliseum

This thing really builds up some momentum. A very good version.
He's Gone
May 12, 1981
Veterans' Memorial Coliseum

The Marley version. He died on 5/11/81. Good bluesy outro with strong hints of 'The Other One'--but goes into 'Drums' first.