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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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OrangeTangoJam

yeller dawg

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Submissions

1
Drums
Dec. 10, 1972
Winterland Arena

Supercharged Billy at the helm deconstructing and building layers of structure like a master architect. Some of his most inventive fills put to record
1
Me and My Uncle
July 16, 1972
Dillon Stadium

Notable for coming straight out of Cumberland and the alternate lyrics “And I Grabbed the Bottle, Grabbed Him in the Jaw” A cowboy classic.
1
Promised Land
Aug. 5, 1974
Philadelphia Civic Arena

Firing on all cylinders right out the gate. I'm certain Jerry's fretboard caught fire after that first solo. Impossible not to groove to.
1
El Paso
Dec. 4, 1971
Felt Forum, Madison Square Garden

Delicate. Like a last waltz of the cowboy and his love, with each lick from Jerry conveying the urgency of the story. Keith makes such an impact here.
1
Cumberland Blues
Dec. 4, 1971
Felt Forum, Madison Square Garden

Part of the beginning is cut off, but that doesn't stop this train from rolling on down the mines. Short and sweet.

Comments

Cumberland Blues
Feb. 24, 1974
Winterland Arena

Jerry's tone is near perfection, cuts through the soul with Jerry putting on a relentless clinic of soulful blues licks which a lysergic country twang. The band calmly build and being the perfect backing band for Jerry as he ventures out west. Stunning version.
Mississippi Halfstep Uptown Toodeloo
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

This is my personal favorite version. Jerry’s solo evoke the feeling of watching an old classic Wild West movie that was filmed in the 1920’s. Some incredibly beautiful American music that channels the pure feeling of being out west and experiencing utter beauty that is the American landscape and geography. Enough propaganda, the thing that interests me most about this version is how interwoven Jerry and Keith are. Especially at the end of the last “Across the Rio Grande”, Jerry and Keith find themselves in the same saloon and have an adventure that’s talked about to this day. Keith and Jerry’s subtle and incredible partnership serves as Jerry’s true springboard and what excited him the most about going out every night and creating memories and lifetimes worth of powerful experiences shared in brotherhood and sisterhood. Vocals 10, Musicianship 10, Soloing 10, Ending jam 10, Vibe 10/10 God bless the Grateful Dead!
Viola Lee Blues
Nov. 10, 1967
Shrine Auditorium

THIS is what we call psychedelic blues music. This isn’t nice, this isn’t pretty, this is downright mean, rude and gut punching, and I LOVE IT. Hypersonic blues exploration that takes off at breakneck speed. My favorite interstellar jug band.
Dark Star
Aug. 27, 1972
Old Renaissance Faire Grounds

This could just be that I'm under the influence, but this moves MUCH faster than any normal Dark Star. The way this Dark Star just moves from one passage to another, flowing seamlessly from meditative monk levels of serenity, to absolute chaos magik never ceases to amaze me. This melts into a witchy wizardy concoction of alchemical weirdness that makes the Dead so great. I used to not be the biggest fan of this version but more and more every time I listen to this iconic version it leaves a new impression on me more and more. I truly love this Dark Star, as much as I love 5/4/72. As much as I love 9/24/72, and the transition into El Paso is as uncanny and comforting as it gets. Weird. Just how I like it.
Playin' In The Band
Aug. 31, 1983
Silva Hall - Hult Center for the Performing Arts

This is a surprising journey. The transition in AND out of China Doll is stupendously smooth, and specifically those 2 moments of entering in and exiting out of China Doll has some really enticing moments of melodic adventure and spacey cosmic weirdness. Jerry gets intergalactic as he runs up and down the fretboard as if he's making constellations and making it all connect so seamlessly. Great 80s version!