Classic Rock

The Grateful Dead

Long Strange Trip: Motion Picture Soundtrack

- Tim Batcup

Never knowingly underrepre­sented with regards to output, both studio and live, this double-CD set (three if you plump for the Amazon exclusive) accompanie­s the recent six-part, four-hour documentar­y: the length of an average gig. Eschewing another greatest hits or yet-more-liverariti­es approach, it pulls back the focus with a cherry-picked career overview.

Collated and produced by filmmaker Amir Bar-Lev and band archivist David Lemieux, it’s a perfectly judged collection brimming with exquisite performanc­es. The unreleased 23-minute live version of Dark Star from the Fillmore East,

1970, is the carrot dangling over your average bootleg-hoarding Deadhead’s head, along with a sublime Dear Mr Fantasy/

Hey Jude from Foxboro, 1989.

Studio high spots Uncle John’s Band, Candyman and Ripple provide some crisp and compact ballast to the live meandering­s, and it’s a waste of time to quibble about sins of inclusion and omission in a planet-sized canon. As if.

Other highlights include the MTV-leveraged Dire Straitsesq­ue Touch Of Grey and the poignant ‘Fare you well…’ of album closer Brokedown Palace.

The real gold, however, is the trad/Rev. Gary Davis cover Death Don’t Have No Mercy from Fillmore West, 1969. An emotional and scuffed blues workout, it retrospect­ively illustrate­s where the band came from and where they were heading: that long, strange trip.

 ??  ?? Wide-angled overview of an expansive career.
Wide-angled overview of an expansive career.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom