Grateful Dead
Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [Expanded Edition]
Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [Expanded Edition]
UPC: 603497843725
Format: CD (2 disc)
Release Date: Jun 25, 2021
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![Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [Expanded Edition] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/539a0f4b5a62ffb0b92163b25b95f222_ee699258-61a3-4393-88b7-386c388d0004.jpg?v=1781122611&width=1445)
One of the things that made the Dead such a unique live act was the sheer variety of their influences. The vastness of the musical terrain they covered is well demonstrated on 1971's GRATEFUL DEAD, nicknamed "Skull & Roses" because of its cover art. It captures the band's live sound at a time when their marathon, acid-inspired concerts were swiftly becoming the stuff of legend and earning them legions of new fans.
This set conveys the typical arc of a Dead show. The band could be economical and straightforward, with brisk, stripped-down numbers like the lilting "Bertha," the straight-forward country of "Me and My Uncle" and Merle Haggard's "Mama Tried," and the country-folk of "Me and Bobby McGee." They could just as easily go into lugubrious album-side-filling improvisations like "The Other One," and pump out loose-limbed, groovy versions of '50s rockers like Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away" and Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." The set concludes with the laid-back, joyous jam of the traditional "Goin' Down the Road Feelin Bad." Conspicuous in his absence is singer/keyboardist Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, whose alcoholism was beginning to take its toll.
This set conveys the typical arc of a Dead show. The band could be economical and straightforward, with brisk, stripped-down numbers like the lilting "Bertha," the straight-forward country of "Me and My Uncle" and Merle Haggard's "Mama Tried," and the country-folk of "Me and Bobby McGee." They could just as easily go into lugubrious album-side-filling improvisations like "The Other One," and pump out loose-limbed, groovy versions of '50s rockers like Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away" and Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." The set concludes with the laid-back, joyous jam of the traditional "Goin' Down the Road Feelin Bad." Conspicuous in his absence is singer/keyboardist Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, whose alcoholism was beginning to take its toll.
Tracks:
Disc 1:
1 - Bertha
2 - Mama Tried
3 - Big Railroad Blues
4 - Playing in the Band
5 - Other One
6 - Me & My Uncle
7 - Big Boss Man
8 - Me & Bobby McGee
9 - Johnny B. Goode
10 - Wharf Rat
11 - Not Fade Away/Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad
Disc 2:
1 - Good Lovin'
2 - Sing Me Back Home
3 - Mama Tried
4 - Cryptical Envelopment
5 - Drums
6 - Other One
7 - Big Boss Man
8 - Not Fade Away, Pt. 1
9 - Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad
10 - Not Fade Away, Pt. 2
1 - Bertha
2 - Mama Tried
3 - Big Railroad Blues
4 - Playing in the Band
5 - Other One
6 - Me & My Uncle
7 - Big Boss Man
8 - Me & Bobby McGee
9 - Johnny B. Goode
10 - Wharf Rat
11 - Not Fade Away/Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad
Disc 2:
1 - Good Lovin'
2 - Sing Me Back Home
3 - Mama Tried
4 - Cryptical Envelopment
5 - Drums
6 - Other One
7 - Big Boss Man
8 - Not Fade Away, Pt. 1
9 - Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad
10 - Not Fade Away, Pt. 2