
GRATEFUL DEAD 'DICK'S PICKS VOL. 2-COLUMBUS, OHIO 10/31/71' CD
LABEL: Real Gone Music
CD RELEASE DATE: 10/7/2022
ORIGINAL RELEASE DATE: 1995
VARIANT: CD
The Grateful Deadâs Halloween 1971 performance is almost enough to make one believe in spirits. For that nightâcaptured on this, the only single CD release in the entire Dickâs Picks seriesâthe group played the most ethereal, dreamy, and, yes, spooky version of âDark Starâ ever recorded; itâs almost as if Jerry Garcia was communing with his ancestors (and maybe John Coltrane) for the first seven minutes of his beautifully structured, contemplative and yearning solo. Then, after the vocal verse, Garcia, rhythm guitarist Bob Weir, and bassist Phil Lesh take turns suggesting a new improvisational theme before the band telepathically picks up on a two-note theme and Garcia launches into some of the most ecstatic guitar playing ever captured on tape anywhere (labeled by some the âTighten Upâ jam after the Archie Bell & the Drells song; others hear an embryonic âEyes of the Worldâ). The rest of the disc is more than fine, with a spirited âSugar Magnolia,â a rare, early-â70s performance of âSt. Stephenâ (the final live version until 1976) and a great âNot Fade Awayâ/âGoinâ Down the Road Feeling Badâ closer rounding out the 59-minute program. But really, the âDark Starâ is worth the price of this single CD release alone. Out of print for years!
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Description
LABEL: Real Gone Music
CD RELEASE DATE: 10/7/2022
ORIGINAL RELEASE DATE: 1995
VARIANT: CD
The Grateful Deadâs Halloween 1971 performance is almost enough to make one believe in spirits. For that nightâcaptured on this, the only single CD release in the entire Dickâs Picks seriesâthe group played the most ethereal, dreamy, and, yes, spooky version of âDark Starâ ever recorded; itâs almost as if Jerry Garcia was communing with his ancestors (and maybe John Coltrane) for the first seven minutes of his beautifully structured, contemplative and yearning solo. Then, after the vocal verse, Garcia, rhythm guitarist Bob Weir, and bassist Phil Lesh take turns suggesting a new improvisational theme before the band telepathically picks up on a two-note theme and Garcia launches into some of the most ecstatic guitar playing ever captured on tape anywhere (labeled by some the âTighten Upâ jam after the Archie Bell & the Drells song; others hear an embryonic âEyes of the Worldâ). The rest of the disc is more than fine, with a spirited âSugar Magnolia,â a rare, early-â70s performance of âSt. Stephenâ (the final live version until 1976) and a great âNot Fade Awayâ/âGoinâ Down the Road Feeling Badâ closer rounding out the 59-minute program. But really, the âDark Starâ is worth the price of this single CD release alone. Out of print for years!

















