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find the best versions of grateful dead songs

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nonoyolker

Weirs Jort Army

+56125


Submissions

47
Stella Blue
April 21, 1978
Rupp Arena

Powerful version.
5
Not Fade Away
March 28, 1972
Academy of Music

This NFA motors and the GDTRFB is a solid outing, save for some significant caterwauling from Donna Jean
36
Loose Lucy
Feb. 26, 1973
Pershing Municipal Auditorium

The filthy marriage of stank and swagger for this one - hot ish
21
Samson and Delilah
Sept. 28, 1976
Onondaga County War Memorial

Great god almighty now - this is a mad percussive version that leads into a beautiful open jam. Very unique
47
Scarlet Begonias -> Fire On The Mountain
Oct. 16, 1977
Louisiana State U

Airy, beautiful, flowing rendition

Comments

Playin' In The Band
March 23, 1974
Cow Palace

Genuinely surprised to see how low this is rated. Aside from a rather comical false start, this leads off a major jam sandwich for the ages. This Playin' in particular is gooey, flowing, creative, and melodic. Just my kind of jamming for the song. Flows effortlessly into subsequent segues. Haven't respun in ages and this segment holds up perfectly, on new vinyl release no less!
Morning Dew
July 4, 1989
Rich Stadium

I had a serious moment with this one last night... A complete emotional powerhouse. This version is everything
Loose Lucy
July 25, 1974
International Amphitheater

Big and bouncy. As noted, Phil pumps this Lucy UP
Looks Like Rain
Dec. 26, 1979
Oakland Auditorium

Put me firmly in the LLR fan grouping. Bobby's emotive chaw and Jerry's peaky guitar are a serious draw for me. And while lyrically, the second verse is indefensibly bad, the first verse is actually quite nice and one that I always enjoy. This version has all of the goods - Bobby digging deep on emotional blast and Jerry railing home the song's gravity in his solo. Nice version
Bertha
Aug. 27, 1972
Old Renaissance Faire Grounds

While many of the songs played in this show are unnecessarily glorified compared to equally as good, if not subjectively better versions of songs, the show and versions within are still cannon and for defensible reasons. It's a rock solid show cover-to-cover, with any-era level highlights of versions. Cases can easily be made for many other far less lauded shows as being as good, though this one emerged over time as legend. This Bertha though, my. GOD. To complement the previous comments, Jerry has rarely ever blazed such a fast and tight solo in the jam portion. I hadn't heard in a while and it took me by complete surprise how ferocious and nimbly he takes that one. Definitely a fantastic version and yes, Veneta is peak output. Not every version is best ever, but as a complete performance, this show is obviously really damn good