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Grateful Dead – Self-Titled

We just finished a big shootout for this title and it was pretty difficult. The best Gold Label originals and Green Label pressings can be superb, but most of them are noisy and many of them don’t sound any good. Those of you who are familiar with this music are sure to be surprised at how good these songs sound here.

Unfortunately, Viola Lee Blues, the last track on side two, never sounds all that good. It’s pretty easy to imagine that high-fidelity audiophile-quality sonics were not what these guys were going for in 1966.

The Dead’s first album is a fun one, sounding more like a bluesy biker band on speed than the tripped-out jam band these guys became. You’re never going to find a copy of this one with Demo Disc sound, but at least a copy like this lets you hear what the band was going for without the grit and congestion (not to mention godawful surfaces) that you find on the typical pressing.

What amazing sides such as these have to offer is not hard to hear:

No doubt there’s more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.

What We Listen For on Grateful Dead

TRACK LISTING

Side One

The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) 
Beat It on Down the Line 
Good Morning Little Schoolgirl 
Cold Rain and Snow 
Sitting on Top of the World

Side Two

Cream Puff War 
Morning Dew 
New, New Minglewood Blues 
Viola Lee Blues

AMG Review

The Grateful Dead’s eponymously titled debut long-player was issued in mid-March of 1967. This gave rise to one immediate impediment — the difficulty in attempting to encapsulate/recreate the Dead’s often improvised musical magic onto a single LP.

… it’s a valiant attempt to corral the group’s hydra-headed psychedelic jug-band music on vinyl. Under the technical direction of Dave Hassinger — who had produced the Rolling Stones as well as the Jefferson Airplane — the Dead recorded the album in Los Angeles during a Ritalin-fuelled “long weekend” in early 1967… [they] would continue to play well over half of these tracks in concert for the next 27 years.

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