(2021) Grateful Dead - Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [50th Anniversary Expanded Edition]
Review: Grateful Dead’s 50th anniversary series keeps on truckin’ with the reissue of the band’s 1971 eponymous live album also known as their “Skull and Roses” album after the cover artwork by Alton Kelley and Stanley Mouse. While the Dead was still a young band at that point, Grateful Dead was their second double-LP live album following 1969’s Live/Dead. It also was one of their most successful LPs, peaking at No. 25 on the Billboard Top LPs chart and earning their first Gold sales certification. It remained their best-seller until the 1974 collection Skeletons from the Closet: The Best of Grateful Dead surpassed it. Today’s announcement marks 50 years from the date of the first show represented on the release, March 24, 1971, from San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom. The centerpiece of the reissue is more than hour of previously unreleased music from another famed SF venue, Bill Graham’s Fillmore West, recorded on July 2, 1971 during the Dead’s final show at the Fillmore West. Highlights include “Good Lovin’,” “Sing Me Back Home,” “Mama Tried,” and a closing medley of “Not Fade Away” and “Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad.” Grateful Dead will arrive as a 2-CD set with the additional live tracks and a 2-LP, 180-gram black vinyl edition of the original album only. Dead.net has an black-and-white propeller vinyl variant (limited to 5,000 copies). In any format, Grateful Dead finds Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, and Ron “Pigpen” McKernan in fine form for four sides, or 70+ minutes, of music recorded in March-April 1971 at Winterland as well as New York’s Fillmore East and Hammerstein Ballroom. The original album released on October 24, 1971 did employ some vocal and instrumental overdubs, however, including from Garcia’s frequent collaborator Merl Saunders whose organ tends to overshadow Pigpen’s. Saunders played on the three new original songs “Bertha,” “Wharf Rat,” and “Playing in the Band.” The latter became one of the Dead’s most-played songs of all time (fourth most-played, to be exact) and was later recorded by the solo Weir on his 1972 album Ace. The third side of Grateful Dead was an all-covers set, with John Phillips’ “Me and My Uncle,” the Luther Dixon/Al Smith-penned Jimmy Reed hit “Big Boss Man,” Kris Kristofferson and Fred Foster’s “Me and Bobby McGee,” and Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode.” The album has been remastered from the original stereo master tapes by David Glasser using the Plangent Process, and new liner notes have been written by Gary Lambert.
Track Listing: Disc 1: Original album (released 1971)
01.Bertha
02.Mama Tried
03.Big Railroad Blues
04.Playing in the Band
05.The Other One
06.Me & My Uncle
07.Big Boss Man
08.Me & Bobby McGee
09.Johnny B. Goode
10.Wharf Rat
11.Not Fade Away/Goin’ Down the Road Feeling Bad
Disc 2: Live at The Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA – 7/2/1971
01.Good Lovin’
02.Sing Me Back Home
03.Mama Tried
04.Cryptical Envelopment
05.Drums >
06.The Other One
07.Big Boss Man
08.Not Fade Away, Pt. 1
09.Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad
10.Not Fade Away, Pt. 2
Media Report: Genre: rock
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits |