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Shakedown Street (Expanded) [Remastered]

Grateful Dead

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Good Lovin' Grateful Dead 4:50 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 France Grateful Dead 4:04 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Shakedown Street Grateful Dead 4:59 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Serengetti Grateful Dead 2:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Fire On the Mountain Grateful Dead 3:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 I Need a Miracle Grateful Dead 3:35 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 From the Heart of Me Grateful Dead 3:25 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Stagger Lee Grateful Dead 3:28 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 All New Minglewood Blues Grateful Dead 4:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 If I Had the World to Give Grateful Dead 5:00 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Good Lovin' (Studio Outtake) Grateful Dead 4:56 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Ollin Arageed (Live) Grateful Dead 6:30 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 Fire On the Mountain (Live) Grateful Dead 13:43 Album Only View In iTunes
14 Stagger Lee (Live) Grateful Dead 6:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
15 All New Minglewood Blues (Live) Grateful Dead 4:34 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Since the Grateful Dead were notorious for recording awkward studio albums, it always seemed that the answer to their problem was simply getting the right producer to coax magic out of the band — and nobody would seem better suited for the position than Little Feat leader Lowell George, whose own band shared the Dead's tendency to wander and jam in a live setting, yet made almost nothing but good studio records. But 1978 was not a great year for either camp, as the Dead were drifting in their attempts to score a crossover hit for Clive Davis' Arista Records, while George was pushing Little Feat toward disbandment as he was inching closer to his premature death in 1979. Add to that the Dead's sudden, inexplicable fascination with disco, a desire to have Donna Jean Godchaux be an integral part of the record, plus no new songs ready to go at the beginning of the sessions, and it's little surprise that Shakedown Street wound up as a mess. It rambles and wanders all over the place, as the Dead cover the Rascals' "Good Lovin'" before they revive "New Minglewood Blues" (which they originally cut for their debut), as Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter write their own "Stagger Lee" while Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann get a percussion workout on the brief instrumental "Serengetti" and Bob Weir affects a bluesy growl on "I Need a Miracle." In George's hands, this is all given a smooth gloss not all that far removed from such latter-day Feat LPs as The Last Record Album, but since the Dead favor hazy, lazy grooves to Feat's laid-back but tight New Orleans funk — and since George didn't produce so much as he created an appropriate atmosphere in the studio — Shakedown Street meanders mercilessly, and its indulgences wind up overwhelming the album as a whole. And there isn't just one kind of indulgence here; there's a plethora of them, ranging from the disco pulse of the title track to the fuzziness of the two songs sung by Donna Jean. This can make Shakedown Street a bit of a difficult, dated listen, since even the good songs boast bad arrangements ("Shakedown Street" and "Fire on the Mountain" were later reworked and revitalized in concert), yet it falls short of flat-out disaster, partially because it's a fascinating listen due to the very things that make it a severely flawed record. The disco flirtations, subdued funk, misguided commercial concessions, and overarching Californian slickness do make Shakedown Street fascinating for at least one spin, even if they'll keep even hardcore Deadheads — maybe especially hardcore Deadheads — from coming back to the record more than once every decade or so. [In 2004, Rhino released a remastered, expanded edition of Shakedown Street as part of the exhaustive 12-disc box Beyond Description (1973-1989); in 2006, this expanded CD was released separately. The expanded disc contained five bonus tracks: a studio outtake of "Good Lovin'" featuring Lowell George on lead vocals that was better than the cut that made the LP, but still not great; three solid songs — "Ollin Arageed," "Fire on the Mountain," and "Stagger Lee" — from a September 1978 concert in Cairo, with the latter two eclipsing the versions on the studio LP, even if "Fire" stretches out a bit too long; finally, there's a version of "All New Minglewood Blues" taken from a November 1978 concert in Jersey.]

Recent Customer Reviews

I realllly like this album
     
by HipsteRen

This album isn't The Dead's strongest, but I realllllly do like it. It does offer a unique sound, and if you're sick of listening to the same songs over and over again then this could be a good album for you because you can at least pick up a few songs that would you will learn to love like France, Sergentti, From the Heart of Me, and If I had the World to Give. I'm not sure who the woman is singing in a lot of these songs, but I really enjoy her voice as well.

As Stagger Lee Lit a Cigarette, She Shot Him in the Balls
     
by Niciun

Evocative lyrics, beautiful music, from the best period of their career

Well ? I liked it. And it makes me remember Christmas 1978 fondly.
     
by coon dawg

True .. I will be the first to acknowledge this is NOT the bands finest studio moments. However I liked it. And when you receive an album as a Christmas present from your sister. Well ... you just say thank you
and try to enjoy the thoughtful gift. Maybe thats why I look back on this album with such fond memories.

Biography

Formed: 1965 in San Francisco, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s

Rock's longest, strangest trip, the Grateful Dead were the psychedelic era's most beloved musical ambassadors as well as its most enduring survivors, spreading their message of peace, love, and mind-expansion across the globe throughout the better part of three decades. The object of adoration for popular...
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