
However the amount of archival material available makes it possible for 'heads of any generation to enjoy the best of the Dead's music. The scene, for good and bad, exists only in fading memories. But much of the best music sounds just as fresh and exciting today as it did in 1969, 1974, or 1990 (my favorite vintages) or any of the years in between.
Almost all of the Dead recordings I have don't fit into the parameters of this blog, but I do have a couple of tasty selections. Part one is a studio gig from 1970 to promote the Dead's new studio album Workingman's Dead. The record remains, to my mind, the Dead's best studio effort and a uniquely powerful, dark, and eloquent statement.


Recorded in KQED's San Francisco studio on August 30, 1970 for a TV program called Calebrations (heady puns abound), we get five tracks from the album: starting with one of my favorite Pigpen tunes, Easy Wind. Pig still has his pipes here and steady drives us through this syncopated romp. This short set shows the transitional state some of the songs, especially Candyman, which is more fast-paced and folk-y on the album. I think the slower tempo really cuts deep with the lyrics of womanizing and murderous revenge. Then a straightforward Casey Jones, not yet the barn-burning encore staple of later years.

Footage from the TV broadcast still exists, and the Easy Wind and Candyman have been posted on YouTube. Links provided for your enjoyment. Some really cheesy psychedelic stuff, truly a period document and rare footage of the band in their younger days. Good camera angles actually, but pretty poor video quality. Worth 15 minutes, anyway. Good energy helped by an excited studio audience.
Filling out this week's package, even though it doesn't quite fit the criteria, is my favorite long-format version of Dark Star, from San Fran's Family Dog Ballroom November 2, 1969. This sprawling version has it all, a powerful intro to the first verse, sparkling, patient exploratory jams, great swirling percussion "space" and a smooth vamp of a second jam that puts a big smile on my face. All of what I'm looking for in a big stand-alone Dark Star. Even though it's the end of the tape, it's 30 minutes of all killer with no "filler."
Enjoy.
Download The Grateful Dead live at KQED Studios 1970-8-30 + 11/2/69 Dark Star
Watch "Easy Wind"
Watch "Candyman"
Download Workingman's Dead
Purchase Workingman's Dead CD
Jerry is gone but never forgotten. Phil and Bobby are keeping the dream alive with their respective solo outfits, both are touring this summer.
Go on Phil Lesh and Friends Tour
Go on Ratdog Tour
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