Grateful
Dead - Dick's Picks 5
The first complete,
unedited show in the Dick's Picks series and the first show with the "new
kid" Brent Mydland.
3 CD's from Oakland
Auditorium Arena in Oakland, California 12/26/79.
GRATEFUL DEAD
Jerry Garcia - Lead Guitar, Vocals
Mickey Hart – Drums
Bill Kreutzmann – Drums
Phil Lesh - Bass, Vocals
Brent Mydland - Keyboards, Vocals
Bob Weir - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
Disc One:
Cold Rain and Snow
C C Rider
Dire Wolf
Me and My Uncle->
Big River
Brown-Eyed Women
Minglewood
Friend of the Devil
Looks Like Rain
Alabama Getaway->
Promised Land
Disc Two:
Uncle John's Band->
Estimated Prophet->
He's Gone-> The Other One->
Drums->
Disc Three:
Drums (continued)->
Not Fade Away->
Brokedown Palace->
Around and Around->
Johnny B. Goode
(Encores)
Shakedown Street->
Uncle John's Band
Dick's Picks, Volume
5 is a fine portrait of the band in this period. Significantly, it is
the first release in the series that presents a complete show from start
to finish, and so the first to show how a Dead show told the whole story
- the nice gradual exposition, the plot getting more complex, the suspense
building to a fever pitch, and the big, happy ending.
As on all the Dick's
Picks releases, you're hearing this stuff just as they played it, no overdubs,
no cosmetic repairs, no studio trickery. There are, in other words, mistakes!
But the Grateful Dead, on a good night, had a way of turning straw into
gold, and what mistakes are here are indicative of the bracing recklessness
that characterized the Dead at their best.
There are times, especially
in this show's amazing second set, when you get that scary/exhilarating
feeling of being in a car with no brakes, careening down a preposterously
twisty mountain road fraught with hairpin turns and no guard rail, clinging
to the faith that you'll get to the bottom in one piece. There are times
where the music seems destined to rip apart at the seams, only to coalesce
into something utterly startling in its power and clarity. Take, for example,
a sequence coming out of "Estimated Prophet," that you're sure is going
to segué into "Terrapin Station," but instead turns into a completely
over-the-top jam that sounds like a little like a bluegrass tune gone
mad, with musical references to everything from John Coltrane's "A Love
Supreme" to Isaac Hayes' "Theme From Shaft". And if you're a lover of
that quintessential Phil Lesh moment known to fans as "dropping The Bomb,"
you'll be pleased to know that this set features one of the more spectacular
and surprising examples of the species.
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