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The Unofficial 31 Days of Dead - 2012 Edition - Day One http://www.glidemagazine.com/hiddentr... ----- Truckin' -} The Other One -} Morning Dew 12/31/72 Winterland, San Francisco, CA Today is the 40th Anniversary of the Grateful Dead's amazing performance at Winterland on New Year's Eve in 1972. I can't think of a better way to celebrate that milestone than by selecting the "big jam" from that show to ring in 2013. I'm taking the day off to pop the champagne cork. Today's write-up comes courtesy of the Dead Essays blog. I hope you enjoyed the 2012 edition of the Unofficial 31 Days of Dead. Happy 2013 all! "Technically this show was the first of '73, starting at midnight and continuing til around 4 am on January 1! But the second set shows no sign of weariness -- if anything, it's one of the most inspired sets of the month. A fine long jam comes out of Truckin', not explosive but full of anticipation as Garcia sounds eager to roam. He starts playing excited Other One runs while the rest of the band is still in Truckin'. They stay in this transition a long time -- Garcia won't let go for the usual drum solo, instead the Other One slowly emerges as Garcia dashes from one new theme to the next, the jam getting more inspired as it goes along. After Lesh finally plays the Other One Intro, the band oozes into a very pretty, drippy jam. They abruptly pause for a drum break, followed by an aimless Lesh solo -- as he goes into a repeating bass riff that would be very common in '73, the band spins out of this into a fullbore jazz jam. David Crosby has joined them on a twelve-string, giving them a more dense and cluttered sound -- he fits right in (he had also played on the 9/10/72 Dark Star), playing chordal backing along with Weir. The jam speeds up, Garcia barreling along at warp speed, the atmosphere electric, more happening than the ear can catch -- Godchaux in particular is outstanding throughout this night's jams, in his element as he drives the band forward. All of a sudden they stop for a very spacey wah-wah interlude, Godchaux's piano-tinkles and Crosby's bending chords ringing out loudly. Garcia slides into feedback, Lesh pushing him with loud rumbles, the band jabbing in spikes of fizzling confusion, and they rip into a short but powerful Tiger. Dazed, the band drifts, Garcia's guitar creaking and rattling as Crosby adds to the mayhem. Somehow out of this, Weir bursts into some chords and it sounds like they're going into Me & My Uncle -- but it turns out to be a new jam. Just as it gets hotter and seems due to explode, Garcia drops out for a while and it's time for a Weir chordal solo -- once Garcia rejoins him, the band drops nearly to silence. Out of some drum taps, suddenly Lesh rumbles into the Other One again, and we're treated to a very hot entry into the verse. The biggest surprise of all happens after the verse -- instead of an Other One jam, all of a sudden Garcia slows down the band on a dime into a superb, sweet instrumental that must be heard to be believed -- it's not at all like the Dead's other jams in these shows. It almost sounds like they rehearsed it for just this occasion, it's so tight and evocative. Garcia's lead is simply fantastic, one of the most transcendent pieces I've heard him play. Lifting to an even higher level, this passage ends with Garcia's violin-like volume-swell solo -- Crosby backing him with graceful notes -- which slides fantasy-like into a dreamy Morning Dew. Crosby & Weir add a very phased sound to Dew -- Garcia's singing is heartfelt, and he plays a powerful middle solo. The ending jam, growing out of Garcia/Crosby twin leads, is very deliberate and extended with Crosby's heavy chords and Garcia's fanning, ending this long jam medley with an emotional bang . . . . . . And with that, the Dead bid farewell to 1972. The next month would be a busy one, writing and rehearsing several new songs -- and in February, they'd come back to the stage with a smoother, more relaxed style.... But that's a story for another day." [via Dead Essays] Day 31 Download Link: http://www.mediafire.com/?23avdhdmygo... LMA Link: http://archive.org/details/gd1972-12-... Ed Martin Ed Martin is an amateur musician, an amateur mixtape creator and an amateur coach of his 9-year-old daughter's basketball team. / bearschoice http://www.glidemagazine.com/hiddentr...