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Do you think you hate the Grateful Dead? Give ‘Terrapin Station’ a try, you might change your mind
10.07.2016
12:07 pm
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Do you think you hate the Grateful Dead? Give ‘Terrapin Station’ a try, you might change your mind


 
I’ve noticed how posting something about the Grateful Dead on Dangerous Minds tends to bring out both very pro and sometimes very con views from the peanut gallery about the band, or rather, when you look a little bit closer, about their fans.

The fans, the Deadheads themselves, it seems to me, were always the stumbling point for a lot of rock snobs who might otherwise have loved what the Dead had to offer.

I, too, was one of those snobs who turned up my nose at going to see Dead shows many a time (which I now regret) even though I loved them on record. The whole hippie thing felt terribly anachronistic to me, a PiL, Kraftwerk, Throbbing Gristle, Nina Hagen, Residents, Psychedelic Furs-loving kid, during the postpunk era (There was also the factor that I might actually meet the sort of girls I wanted to meet at, say, a Siouxsie and The Banshees show, but never at a Dead show, if that makes sense. It was a time management thing!). The fading tie-dye shtick felt even more dated in the 1990s. Today, I wish I’d gone to see a Dead show. My loss, truly.
 

 
Nevertheless, I’ve been going through quite a bit of a Grateful Dead phase lately, and I’ve found over the years, that this journey always comes full circle for me to their 1977 masterpiece, Terrapin Station. As great as American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead are, Terrapin Station is the one that stands out to me. It’s truly a remarkable album, but especially the title title track which takes up all of side two.

Have you ever heard it? If not, what are you waiting for? Press play.
 

 
Terrapin Station” is one hell of an AMAZING song suite, is it not? The choir and orchestration—arranged by the great Paul Buckmaster who’s worked with Elton John, Lloyd Cole and on David Bowie’s “Space Oddity”—see this song depart from the folk/blues/psych of the Dead’s normal sound for something more akin to say, Yes, Moody Blues or Genesis.

But seriously, what kind of crazy fuckin’ Jerry-hater are you if you can’t dig this??? Do you just hate music in general?

Terrapin Station” became a live staple in the band’s set list, getting over 300 plays throughout the years, but frustratingly never the full thing. The most complete live version was performed on March 18, 1977 at Winterland Arena in San Francisco. There are seven parts to “Terrapin Station” part 1 and this is the single occasion where the band played four of the seven parts. Usually they only performed the first two parts and very occasionally the third. After Garcia’s death, many of the various post Dead touring formulations have played the entire suite.
 

 
This live version, also from Winterland on New Year’s Eve of 1978—the night the venue closed—is a fine, delicately rendered performance, but the majestic studio recording, in my opinion, is still waaay better. If you happen to be new to this material, start with the first clip embedded above and then move on to the live versions.
 

 
A stop at “Terrapin Station” on April 24, 1977 at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, NJ.
 

 
A sparkling “Estimated Prophet” and “Terrapin Station” at New York’s Radio City Music Hall on October 29, 1980.

Posted by Richard Metzger
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10.07.2016
12:07 pm
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