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Jerry Garcia’s 50 Greatest Songs

From country-rock gems to exploratory jams, from Grateful Dead classics to solo high-points, here’s the ultimate guide to an epic musical life

Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead performs at Cal Expo Amphitheatre on August 14, 1991 in Sacramento, California.

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Related: Grateful Dead Ultimate Album Guide

Just as the Grateful Dead were more than just a “jam band,” Jerry Garcia was more than just the affable Captain Trips of the scene. Over the roughly 35 years that he wrote and recorded songs with the Dead and on his own, Garcia was an uncommonly eclectic musician — equally at home with folk, bluegrass, electronic music, old-timey ballads, country, reggae, and Chuck Berry-style rock & roll. Nor was he simply “Jolly Jerry,” as his longtime lyrical collaborator, Robert Hunter, told Rolling Stone in a 2015 interview. “That man had an agony almost that he had to fight,” Hunter said. “I suppose it had something to do with losing his dad so young, and possibly his finger getting chopped off. Who knows, but there was a decided darkness to him. But you know, what great man doesn’t have that? His bright side, his ebullient side, far seemed to outweigh [it]. The darkness came into his music a lot. And without it, what would that music have been?”

All those sides of Garcia — musically and internally — emerge in this collection of the 50 greatest songs that he performed with the Dead and from his solo records.

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From Rolling Stone US

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“Dark Star,” ‘Live/Dead’ (1969)

The mothership of all dead jams, which regularly stretched toward and often beyond 30 minutes, “Dark Star” was always powered by Garcia’s radiant lead lines. In the best live versions — among them, the February 1969 Fillmore West take canonized on Live/Dead and the February 1970 Fillmore East late-show journey (Dick’s Picks 4), with its jaunty sunburst at the 19-minute mark — Garcia opened melodies into melodies like a morphing fractal zoom. Hunter wrote the lyrics in 1967, the first verse arriving while he listened to the band rehearsing a new song. “The music seemed to be saying that,” Hunter recalled, “and I transcribed it.” (The remaining lines came later, written in the Golden Gate Park Panhandle, according to Hunter, after sharing a joint with a stranger.) A recording was made and released as a single in 1968, but it tanked and never appeared on a studio album. No matter: Compared to what “Dark Star” would become, it was but a road map scrawled on a napkin.

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“Uncle John’s Band,” ‘Workingman’s Dead’ (1970)

A gentle acoustic ballad with a deceptively fierce spirit, “Uncle John’s Band” sums up the soul of Jerry Garcia and how he saw himself and the Dead. With a title that references his middle name, it offers an image of a singer and his violin by the riverside, bringing a ragtag bunch of misfits and outcasts together into a community. Garcia and Robert Hunter wrote “Uncle John’s Band” at the very end of the Sixties, when their community seemed on the verge of collapse — the Dead played the finished song live for the first time in December 1969, two nights before the chaotic, death-stained Altamont debacle. (The song itself began to take shape when the Dead sent a tape of an instrumental jam to Hunter, who then wrote words to it, starting with, “Goddamn, Uncle John’s mad!”) You can hear a Latin lilt to the bongos and guitar, but the original inspiration came from elsewhere.

As Garcia recalled, “At that time, I was listening to records of the Bulgarian Women’s Choir and also this Greek-Macedonian music, and on one of those records, there was this little turn of melody that was so lovely that I thought, ‘Gee, if I could get this into a song it would be so great.’ So I stole it!” With Garcia, Bob Weir and Phil Lesh joining their fragile voices to proclaim their hippie tribalism as part of a great homegrown American tradition, “Uncle John’s Band” became the Dead’s most idealistic song, but also their most resilient and defiant. As Hunter says of his lyric, “It was my feeling about what the Dead was and could be. It was very much a song for us and about us, in the most hopeful sense.”