headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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grendel

Books and Music

+24543


Submissions

19
Satisfaction
Oct. 10, 1982
Frost Amphitheatre

Weir: "We know we aint gonna get no satisfaction but we're gonna give it a try...You can scream& twist & beg & cry!"
71
Let It Grow
May 1, 1981
Hampton Coliseum

Lightning quick yet totally on-track riffs from Jerry; intense, powerful version. Weir 100% into it. Segues into killer Deal. Trust me. Must hear.
51
Tennessee Jed
Oct. 10, 1982
Frost Amphitheatre

Perfect wind up, pitch & strike down the middle. I've yet to hear a better one, though I'll try some of the recs here. Til then.....
29
Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad
June 8, 1977
Winterland Arena

From one of the greatest shows ever, a bring the house down killer. Keith w/perfect piano exc. point!
43
Althea
May 1, 1981
Hampton Coliseum

Perfect groove and massive push from Phil post-lyrics

Comments

Terrapin Station
May 17, 1977
Memorial Coliseum

^^^^That’s a wonderful story! Cool too that you got your old man to admit he likes the Cornell BEW. I’m with you in my passion for this tune, it’s one of my very favorites of the 1st set variety along with Row Jimmy and Cassidy so I guess that’s why I care enough to claim that a version like 11/4/77 is so much better than Cornell. I’ve gone back and listened a lot to 5/8 since the official release and it’s undoubtedly strong in almost every way but I’m still caught on having that particular version being #1. I can’t prove it but my guess is if the date label were removed it’d come in top 3-5, but not in 1st place. And I’d be fine with that.
Morning Dew
March 27, 1994
Nassau Coliseum

What gets me most is how stupendously strong Garcia’s vocals are on this version. He’s belting it out like he’s 20 years younger but he still also adds that veteran grizzle that made the song even more emotionally powerful in his later days. The playing is great too and he nails the obligatory shredded outro but it’s really astonishing that this is sung in ‘94. It’s crazy good and I have no problem saying a top 10 all time version.
Bertha
July 31, 1974
Dillon Stadium

All true about the unique sounding quality to this. Took me a few listens before realizing the familiar sounding but decidedly non-Bertha-like opening riff was just like a '73 version of "They Love Eeach Other" but it works great. Solid reading after that and a cool, confident Bertha that deserves more listens. Lots of Phil to enjoy too,
Big River
Sept. 23, 1972
Palace Theater

Unreal. Utterly unique. Fantasmagoric syncopated start & overall feel.Unlike any Big River I've ever heard. Should skyrocket up the board if enough ears get on it. Wow!
Candyman
April 1, 1990
The Omni

Yeah, this one has that bluesy cadence and just the right amount of oomph in the solo. Jerry's voice this entire show is in that sweet spot...lots of grit and enough emotion to power through the rough spots. Up-vote worthy!