History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 (Bear's Choice) [Bonus Tracks] Grateful Dead

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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks

  • Release Date: 03/25/2003
  • Original Release: 1973
  • Sales Rank: 4,899
  • Label: RHINO / WEA
  • UPC: 081227440022
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 (Bear's Choice) [Bonus Tracks]

1LISTENKatie Mae 4:44
2LISTENDark Hollow 3:52
3LISTENI've Been All Around This World 4:18
4LISTENWake Up Little Susie 2:31
5LISTENBlack Peter 7:27
6LISTENSmokestack Lightning 17:59
7LISTENHard to Handle 6:29
8LISTENGood Lovin' Bonus Track 8:56
9LISTENBig Boss Man Bonus Track 4:53
10LISTENSmokestack Lightning Bonus Track / Version Two 15:11
11LISTENSitting on Top of the World Bonus Track 3:20

Special Features:

This digitally remastered 2003 reissue of History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 features a 16-page booklet and four bonus tracks: "Good Lovin'," "Big Boss Man," an alternate version of "Smokestack Lightnin," and a rare live rendition of "Sitting on Top of the World." Previously, this version of History was available only as part of The Golden Road box set.

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Editorial Reviews

This 1973 release was the very last collection that the Grateful Dead authorized during their tenure with Warner Bros. in the late '60s and early '70s. However, this live disc was a sort of melancholy affair, as it centered on material featuring Ron "Pigpen" McKernan (guitar/vocals/mouth harp), who had left the band due to illness in June of the previous year. History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 (Bear's Choice) is somewhat misleading, as a follow-up never came to pass. Band historians, however, claim that this release was optimistically titled because the label had hoped to issue a series of live recordings (à la Dick's Picks) containing highlights from a variety of vintage Dead performances. Alas, with the formation of the group's own label, it was not to be. The single disc includes performances from a highly touted series of shows held over two nights (February 13-14, 1970) at the Fillmore East in New York City. While most assuredly not the finest example of the Dead's formidable acoustic sets, the platter opens with a quartet of cover tunes -- many of which had been entries in Jerry Garcia (guitar/vocals) and McKernan's folky jug band repertoire prior to ultimately forming the electric, psychedelic Grateful Dead. McKernan's playful cover of Lightnin' Hopkins' "Katie Mae" is a somewhat lightweight affair. He counterbalances ad-libbed lyrics with his own very sparse solo guitar picking, which is in perfect keeping with the lonesome nature of this blues. Garcia and Bob Weir (guitar/vocals) join in on the remaining "unplugged" tracks. Both the affective and noir "Dark Hollow" and "I've Been All Around This World" reveal the command of this highly underutilized subdivision of the Dead. Clocking in at seven-plus minutes, the album's sole original composition, "Black Peter," is masterfully executed. It ultimately bests the original Workingman's Dead (1969) version in sheer emotive realization. The two electric offerings -- a cover of Howlin' Wolf's "Smokestack Lightning" and Otis Redding's "Hard to Handle" -- are full-blown rave-ups allowing the entire band to weave its collective R&B-influenced psychedelia, unedited and in real time. Both tracks had become assertive vehicles for McKernan's no-nonsense R&B sensibilities. In 2001, History of the Grateful Dead, Vol. 1 (Bear's Choice) was included in the 12-disc Golden Road (1965-1973) box set, and in 2003 was also made available by Rhino and Warner Strategic Marketing as a stand-alone purchase. This remastered edition comes replete with a newly inked 16-page liner notes insert containing an essay from "the Bear" (aka Owsley Stanley) himself. The expanded track list yields four additional performances from the same cache of shows: the McKernan-led "Good Lovin'," "Big Boss Man," a second and equally scintillating version of "Smokestack Lightning," and an uptempo "Sitting on Top of the World," the latter of which keeps the frenetic spirit of the reading from the Dead's self-titled debut firmly intact. Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide

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