Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 2487
Length: 9:08
Plays (last 30 days): 0
You're gonna give your love to me
I wanna love you night and day
You know our lovin' not fade away
You know our lovin' not fade away
Not fade away
My love is bigger than a Cadillac
I try to show you but you drive me back
Your love for me has gotta be real
You're gonna know just how I feel
A love that's real not fade away
Not fade away
Going down the road feeling bad
Going down the road feeling bad
Going down the road feeling bad, hey hey hey, yeah
Don't wanna be treated this a way
Going where the climate suits my clothes
I'm going where the climate suits my clothes
Going where the climate suits my clothes
Don't wanna be treated this a way
[chorus]
Going where the water tastes like wine
Well I'm going where the water tastes like wine
Going where the water tastes like wine
I don't wanna be treated this a way
[chorus]
[chorus]
[chorus]
We need some contrast and context here.
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
Lyrics to a song it could be.. Generous too
wow
crank it
Deeply, permanently etched into the consciousness. Thank you Grateful Dead, for everything.
You know our lovin' not fade away!
At first I thought Bill had found a seamless transition between two different songs. Now I see they are a medley. Interesting.
First time I heard these two songs, I was blown away by the transition between the two songs. I was very familiar with Not Fade Away and couldn't figure out when it had ended and this "new" song had begun. Long live the Dead.
Not a great choice
this washes away the bad taste left by the previous song (arcade fire tripe)
Never mind...its been done before.
2015 - the year this h8ful comment was added to these boards.
It sounds more like your own head got in your way. At least you finally did overcome yourself.
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
Then you would have loved being at the 1973 Watkins Glen Summer Jam. There were estimated to be around 600,00 people there, far more than the 400,000 at Woodstock 4 years earlier. Unlike Woodstock, which took place over three days and had 32 bands, Watkins Glen was held on one day with only three bands. But they were the three most popular U.S. bands at the time. The Grateful Dead opened, followed by The Band, and then The Allman Brothers Band. The concert went from 12:00 PM noon until around 2:00 AM.. with a couple of rain breaks. For the last hours members of all three bands played together.
To me, the jam band method was a genius way of keeping the music fresh in order to avoid repeating themselves. Every night on tour could be approached as the first gig of the tour.
Europe 72 (two CDs)
Europe 72 agreed
Or, as Bo himself once said, "It's the heartbeat of the universe."
Tony in NJ
W.A.S.T.E.
If chord repetition pisses you off like you say it does, here goes my advice: don't get even close to the album Monster Movie by Can, containing the extended version of Yoo Doo Rite, which after all is only an excerpt from a six-hours-or-so session. For me, it's one of the most mesmerizing pieces of music ever recorded.
Saw The Soft Machine open for Hendrix a million years ago and their entire forty-five
minute set was one song,"We Did It Again"...And those are all the lyrics, btw...
Tony in NJ
W.A.S.T.E.
Europe 72 (two CDs)
mattenuttall wrote:
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
or that the Stones also did a great cover .
Wow. Wow. Wow.
And don't ever forget: it was the US Army that dosed recruits with LSD, when it was legal. Ken Kesey and Neal Cassidy later followed with the acid tests.
Europe '72 -
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
Great post, mattenuttall! And I like the anaology (and image) of the pizza vs. suit....and I'll say I'm the guy wearing the suit with swim shorts under the pants just in case...Long Live RP!!
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
No. No,no no no ... You don't "understand" the Dead in any deliberate, conscious sense. You accept them when they catch you on the uptake.
This https://www.podcastrepublic.ne... is what you need. I promise. Start with Episode 1.
I try to show you but you drive me back"
I know I'm just too literal, but that's funny!
Yeah, baby!
Live Dead is the only Dead.
I was there as well, on the stadium floor, vaping & twirling. cosmic experience.
Several guys in the same band, each playing a different song.
I wonder how they can do that :)
It sets the mood for the weekend.
Still some of the best guitar work I've ever heard.
Yeah baby!
Several guys in the same band, each playing a different song.
If chord repetition pisses you off like you say it does, here goes my advice: don't get even close to the album Monster Movie by Can, containing the extended version of Yoo Doo Rite, which after all is only an excerpt from a six-hours-or-so session. For me, it's one of the most mesmerizing pieces of music ever recorded.
This jam has introduced many a folk to the Dead. Welcome, friend!
Welcome aboard! Grab a seat and get comfortable... real comfortable.
Or just
and dear eyes looking at the deal I have
Randy Marsh's cover:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0RxkxEorG4
"...Fred, this is sergeant Sacker. Listen to me. We've traced the call... it's coming from inside the house. Now a squad car's coming over there right now, just get out of that house!"
Def the Diddley man
Hmmmm... music that repeats chords is boring.
Maybe some education is in order: https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/guitar_forum/index.php?showtopic=49712
or... maybe music isn't for you.
Oh yeah...guitars (rhythm and lead). Oh....and a bass player who knows how to play. And two drummers that understand syncopation.
It's only RnR...but I like it.
I got over it, and am now sufficiently recovered that I can give these tunes an 8.
You go down that road Fred and pretty soon you will be feelin' good.
Resistance is futile! You will be assimilated!
Probably more a bi-polarizing band for many of you.
I'd rather hear Gary Busey pretending to be Buddy Holly playing Not Fade Away.
Goin' Down the Road redeems the whole mess a bit. Maybe it took them that long to all get on the same beat.
A 6
So, so harsh.
At least you remember Gary Busey before he cashed in with his goofy-brain-damaged schtick ("FIND...GARY BUSEY!")
The Dead were never a tight band as far as I can tell. Their playing wandered as much as Gary's mind does on his bad days. But the Dead were still cool.
As much as I like Not Fade Away, I (just like you!), can't wait to get to Goin' Down the Road and Feeling Bad.
Always good to meet another GD fan.
hee hee
AndAgain
But if someone wants to share a joint with me, we could listen again, and perhaps I can be persuaded otherwise!
Personally I don't like this track at all and I haven't heard anything much from the GD that I like, if anything. But I'm happy enough that they've been around to make music that so many appreciate.
I cannot say the same thing about you however Hoosfoos since your every utterance is at best negative and at worst a misanthropic self-delusional attempt at wit. You make Stingray appear open-minded and practically unctuous, and that's really saying something.
Nonetheless I defend your right to post any music-related comment your bowels feel moved to produce.
This song doesnt have the same effect as when I was high a teen.
Tedious
Hell I can still smell the pot, taste the wine and see all the people dancing in the crowd!
Cap Center, final show of a 4 night stand, September 06, 1988?
Yep - I was there.
Yes. Far out, isn't it?
Rockin!
Dance, dance, dance, smile. If only in my head....
Need an 11 for this one!
Looks like a 50th reunion tour is coming up next year.
nah, that would be Pink Floyd.
The Dead are far better than that
I'd rather hear Gary Busey pretending to be Buddy Holly playing Not Fade Away.
Goin' Down the Road redeems the whole mess a bit. Maybe it took them that long to all get on the same beat.
A 6
This song doesnt have the same effect as when I was high a teen.
Tedious
Hell I can still smell the pot, taste the wine and see all the people dancing in the crowd!
We need some contrast and context here.
Take The Band. Sublimely tight musicianship, breathing the same beat, playing their notes on a graph paper of time and sound. They are all order and control. If music wore a suit and tie, The Band is the tailor. This works, for me. I love the Band.
There is, then, The Dead: wandering and loose; coloring outside the lines just enough to make you think "hey!". It's musical pizza, rhythm and notes landing here and there, like sprinkled ingredients, but almost always these guys come together with a beautiful wholeness, like life itself. The Dead let a little entropy in.... This works, for me. I love the Dead.
This is just my opinion: I'm the guy with pizza stains on his suit jacket.
musical pizza. I love it.