Postcards of the Hanging - Grateful Dead Perform the Songs of Bob Dylan (Live) - Grateful Dead

Postcards of the Hanging - Grateful Dead Perform the Songs of Bob Dylan (Live)

Grateful Dead

  • Genre: Jam Bands
  • Release Date: 2004-08-31
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 13
  • Album Price: 9.99
  • ℗ 2002 Grateful Dead Productions, Inc. Marketed by Rhino Entertainment Company, a Warner
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Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
When I Paint My Masterpiece (O Grateful Dead 6:11
2
She Belongs to Me (Live, Septe Grateful Dead 7:20
3
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues (L Grateful Dead 4:29
4
Maggie's Farm (Live, October 3 Grateful Dead 6:13
5
Stuck Inside of Mobile With th Grateful Dead 8:07
6
It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Ta Grateful Dead 7:35
7
Ballad of a Thin Man (Live, Ap Grateful Dead 6:40
8
Desolation Row (Live, March 24 Grateful Dead 9:55
9
All Along the Watchtower (Live Grateful Dead 5:44
10
It's All Over Now, Baby Blue ( Grateful Dead 7:23
11
Man of Peace (Live, June 9, 19 Grateful Dead 5:51
12
Queen Jane Approximately (Live Grateful Dead 6:12
13
Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Q Grateful Dead 4:02

Reviews

  • Better than the master!

    5
    By patrick jordan
    Best version of Desolation Row and Queen Jane ever recorded by anyone!
  • Like Licorice

    5
    By BSP73
    Jerry Garcia once said that the Grateful Dead are like licorice -- not everybody likes licorice, but the ones who do, REALLY like licorice! And one deadhead to another, some of their concert recordings just didn't have the same special sauce as others. This album is special -- every cherry-picked live song rocks. Every recording is beautiful, and all in honor of that amazing bard and frequent stage-sharer, Bobby Dylan. When Dylan and the Dead played together, it was incredible, but to me, the really superb work was in 88'-92, when Dylan's influence and song-writing was seen in virtually every show, but the boys had absorbed his vibrations and made them their own. The majority of the tracks are from that special era, with a few thrown in from the early-mid '80's and a terrific '73 It Takes a Train to Cry. When I first picked up the album, I was blown away to see that my own first show was represented here -- and I can clearly remember the taste of that ice cold beer during Tom Thumb's Blues at RFK Stadium in Washington, DC on 7/12/89. For the ex-tourers, this album will take you back wonderfully to your shows of the period, and for the yet-to-be-indoctrinated deadheads out there -- the ubiquity of Dylan's structures will pull you in and connect you to the phenomenal musical interplay between the members of the Dead. When Dylan satirically wrote "they're selling postcards of the hanging", it wasn't supposed to be a good thing… but rest assured, The Dead's Postcards of the Hanging is a very, very, very good thing.
  • Grateful dead Postcards of the Hanging

    5
    By Reverand Hollywood
    Great album! Can not think of anybody who like good music that would not love it!
  • Bob Would Approve

    5
    By I Lit Out
    This collection is a great example of the deep respect the boys have for Mr. Dylan. Jer and Bobby take Zimmy's songs, and make them their own. My favorites are Jerry's readings of "She Belongs to Me" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue"; along with Weir's renditions of "Ballad Of A Thin Man" and "When I Paint My Masterpiece." The "Train to Cry" jam with The Allman Brothers Band is a standout, as is the "Man Of Peace" studio rehearsal with Dylan. This is a must have for anyone who digs both the Dead and Dylan.

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