I think that it’s amazing that Jerry’s been gone for 25 years... and yet somehow , his essence still is alive , and always will be . You said it man .. “Love” that’s what it’s all about .. that’s what the Grateful Dead is . The expression of the human existence through music .. brothers and sisters .. music with no net .. alive , searching , lost , and found . I think Jerry would be very happy to see what you’re doing . You can tell when it’s from the heart ..
Garcia was/is/will forever be the most honest musician I've ever had the pleasure to see. It was never about how many notes he could cram into a measure of music. It was always about that moment in time. The emotion of that last second. He knew there was as much emotion in the quietness as there was in the aggression. And when he was REALLY ON, the transition between it all was blended effortlessly.
You say honest, I say genuine haha, regardless, he was the master of doing exactly what was appropriate, when able to, and knowing what was not appropriate in the moment with no warning
It takes my emotions to the lowest of lows and brings me back up to a new all time high every time I hear this. This is sadness and happiness in one package. It is perfect and will live forever.
My 1st show was 1988 at Madison Square Garden...I was 8. My dad was a taper. We sat right behind front of house. After that night I was hooked to say the least. My dad took me to see them 40 times after that before we lost Jerry. I knew from that moment on I wanted to be a sound guy. And that's exactly what I do now. This band changed my life in so many ways. Thank you for this video. Brought me right back to being at the show listening to what they do best.
I've been a Deadhead since I first saw them in Boston in 1967. Barton Hall was one of the many 1977 concerts I went to. I also have a modest collection of about 4,000 cd's worth of Grateful Dead stuff.
'Scarlet>Fire' & 'Morning Dew' in that set can stand against any live performance ever & hold their head up high... there's real true magic in the air.
It's A Beautiful thing, was still too young for that show. Didn't start see them till the early 80,s but I must say that is one of the best. Great Year for the Grateful Dead
My daughter is an accomplished musician and she said what Michael said: “You can’t write that..” My daughter was blown away by 5-8-‘77’s Dew and this is a 25 year old who’s been listening to the GD her entire life. Yet this time we just listened to it in the car. Loud. For the first time she really heard/listened intently to what the Boys were capable of doing and she loved it!
I'm shaken. I have listened to thousands of hours of Grateful Dead, I've listened to this version countless times....and yet I was just brought to tears listening to this sitting in front of my computer. Why do I listen to the Grateful Dead?...uhh, that is why.
He's so amazing. Yes the singing & the guitar & the drumming is god tier here but the piano is just such a fantastically vivid rhythmic presence here & accentuates all the right points emotionally in the song, & it's that that takes this performance over the top for me.
My favorite Dead song bar none. IMHO we owe the power of Cornell to Phil but the layering and weaving that the whole band did that day was beyond epic. It was really cool to see you react to this version of the song. This version has the power to take you to a very special place that I think everyone needs to get lost in so they can come out the other side a truly changed traveler. I wish you all the best in the new year and thank you for the amazing videos. Be well.
Many songs have appeared in my life as "song I'd like to hear last", but none have made that list more than this one. Thanks for reminding those of us who know this song well, what it looks like to hear it again for the first time. You're awesome, Michael-- and we appreciate you bringing your musical talents to the "internet community". Blessings brother.
Thank you, Michael. I wish there was a heart button instead of a thumbs up button for this song. It was the song that made me love the Dead back when I was a young lad of 17 oh those many years ago. This song has stood the test of time since those heady days of 1967. Such a wonderful present you have shared with us. The Cornell Concert in 1977 is such a stand out.
I'm not a musician, heck, I'm lucky that I can play the radio, but I can certainly tell that you went on one hell of a bus ride with this gem. Being an old Head, I saw you taken away. From bobbing your head to the rhythm, to that expression that Jerry was taking it a bit far right before he pulled it back in, to bopping to the beat, to the surprise with the "vibrato" of the band, to the wonderment of exactly where they were going when the music seems to fade to the background, to the 1,000 yard stare when you realized where you have been, to the excitement when the band was bringing it back up from the precipice of death, to the wide eyed acknowledgement when you realized where you were going, to the anticipation of getting there, that my friend is the essence of the Good Ole Grateful Dead. Congrats dude
Yeah man, your discovery of the dead is what made me discover you. The dead was/is such a huge part of my life that I had lost touch with for a few years. Thanks for bringing me back. I am enjoying all your videos and being one of your guitar students, but most of all knowing that we are connected by a deeper understanding. Hope to meet you someday.
THANK YOU for playing the song through. Im 51 and I discovered the Dead in 1984 when I was 15. We are grateful that we found you. You are a young man with a son and I can understand the emotion listening to Jerry sing and play this masterpiece. I wish you could have experienced Jerry in person. It was magical.
How many other bands can you say this show or that show this decade that decade when listening to one song haha. I had the pleasure for being a tour rat for the last 4 years of Jers run. I have seen the world but still mark those days some of the best in my life as each day each show was an island on to itself. There were days, there were Days and there were days between. Cheers!
I love when another person gets to feel something like this. Most never encounter or cross the paths with this situation. The dead still move me as they have for years. Glad you got to feel this too.
In all the best performances I've heard of this tune through the years, there's a feeling that it's constantly a millisecond away from disintegrating completely. Like the couple in the landscape of the lyrics, the band barely clings to a remnant of normalcy. A walk, or a tune, performed in the midst of and in spite of the End. This take is like a dream - thanks for checking it out.
Was in a hurry this evening to pick my daughter up from gymnastics practice after a terrible day at work and heard this song for the first time waiting in the carline. This song transported me to another place, a better place. From watching you, I think it had the same effect. How have I gone this long without hearing this?? I guess you I heard it exactly when I needed to
I was one of the thousands of people who were hounding you to do this song from this show. So glad you followed through! What an amazing piece of art. Everybody is playing their hearts out on this one!
You in this video perfectly encapsulates how I feel every time I hear this beautiful masterpiece. The full portion of this set is St. Stephen>Not Fade Away>St. Stephen>Morning Dew, and the whole thing is an absolute monster. The St. Stephen>Morning Dew is so natural and perfect that every time I hear St. Stephen I now expect it to go into Morning Dew. My favorite thing about Morning Dew, and this one in particular, is just what you said: how every instrument is just as important as the other and they all take turns sharing the spotlight
Epic example of the band slowly stepping up the intensity ladder from sweet and subtle to a ferocious catharsis. I used to see this sort of thing just rolling off the stage in thick waves over our heads. The band was just saying, "Oh, ya like that? Well here's comes some more times 2, times 10, times 50." They pushed the music to places most musicians can't even begin to contemplate. And we were grateful for every moment of it.
I was lucky enough in 92 and 93 me and 2 other friends did Dead tour both years in the summer.I would finish my last exams in college then roll out.Saw alot of the U.S and met a bunch of cool people.Some of my greatest memories and ive always love playing Jerry songs.His solos remind me of raindrops hitting a tin roof.
Yup!! The memories we created nearly 30 years ago are still burned in my brain as some of the best days in my life. It’s beautiful and a little sad at the same time as it hard to find things as emotionally satisfying as meeting folks in the lot, seeing/hearing Jer bend time and space then getting a nut brown ale and a grilled cheese at the end of the night. Feels like yesterday brother!
So glad I found your channel a few weeks ago. Until then I literally hadn't picked up my guitar in like 3 years. I got the itch again and damn it feels so good to scratch it. Keep doin what ur doin dude !
Finally!!!! But I'm really interested for Jack Straw of all of the Cornell, I think it will be one of your favorite Dead songs, if you don't know it already. It's my all time favs, and Cornell - the best version EVER
Indeed. Those late 70s jack straws got really dark, and let’s face it, it’s a lyric as dark as they get. It’s almost like it took all those years of insanity and redemption and more insanity from ‘72-‘77 for the musicians to really walk hunter’s lyric.
You get it..your drive home from dropping off son..it just hits you..time to do it..thats what the GD experience is all about..no rhyme or reason..its a life force..after Jerry died, I bailed for 12 years..then I met my soul mate who never heard of the band..no judgements..she was 23, I was 40..then I started taking her on the journey..tears came. I missed it so much..watching her experience even on video what I had brought me back to the living. Then, finding your channel, watching a professional experience it, made me smile. Love you brother!
I love that people are still getting on the bus after so many years. Your speechless moment, sums it up better than any words could. Hope this new year, is better than the last. (~)}:}
I have been waiting for this! I had it cranked, and was laughing out loud as I saw the expression on your face as the intensity built toward the end! I hope you will do another video on it where you unpack what is happening musically in this. I don't play any instruments (alas) but I always learn a lot from your breakdown of the music.
I was never a big Grateful Dead fan until I started watching you Michael! I am so crazy about your videos brother that I find myself lost in them. I play along and try and keep up with you which is next to impossible for me. I so appreciate what your doing and that you bother to take the time to walk us all through these iconic songs. I have a banjo that I break out just for fun and pluck along. Once again Michael thank you thank you. Happy New Year to you and yours. The Muleman.
Thank you! I really needed a boost today and watching someone listen to this recording or the first time was pure joy. I had tears running down my face and a grin from ear to ear. This is one I go back to over and over again. There is so much to take in that every time I listen I get more from it. This version makes me feel all the feelings.
I grew up in Eugene, Oregon during the late sixties through the early eighties. Ken Kesey certainly played a role in my, "formative" years. Jerry played my high school. Ken brought the boys to an epic 3 night stand being the first "rock" show in the building. Ken warned us to behave so we could get them back for more shows. So many years later, I'm still running through those shows. Oh man...
@@joeynice123 It's a blurry memory, lol, but I'm fairly certain I was at the first field trip in 1972. My mother loved the yearly Renaissance Faire. She's a goofball from Germany and this, along with the Saturday Market were a huge draw and I was always eager to go. The difference in the next decades appearance was the addition of Psychedelics. Shows were very different after that...memories!
"When it comes together -- you could never write that, plan that." And that is the essence of Dead, Dead on a great night that didn't happen every night, but when it did, and it did often enough--then you're hooked.
THE morning dew. This song brings a tear to my eye every single time. Happy holidays everyone. DID YOU SEE THE PHISH ANNOUCEMENT!!! CHESS IS BACK!!!!!!!
I have been listening to the Grateful Dead since before I was born, literally from the womb. This version still makes me weep like a toddler with a skinned knee. It is my happiest of happy places.
Fall 77 my first show in Philly and still find the tunes inspiring and peaceful. Love this year in particular due to it being my introduction as a freshman in high school. Traveled the east coast for years and was lucky enough to see them at their best
Michael, this is the Holy Grail 😇.... This is by far my favorite live performance and the jams here are the absolute best. Great job, glad you played it straight through w/ no interruption. Take care 😁✌🍻
I like to comment on every dead song you do... what you said at the beginning about it finding you at the right time in your life is so true. I love your videos! thank you. This cornell 77 series has been an absolute treat. Happy holidays and thank you!!!
A silver lining to this crazy year... and a legacy of the message in the song that takes on extra weight during times of great sorrow and foreboding... Thanks for sharing your reactions with us this year !
The Dead to me is still a gateway to much better times, and a much better mood. They were and are about peace and love. RIP Jerry, Brent, Keith and Ronald.
This is my present. Thank you. How about them drummers 🤙 had the cassettes in 88 onward and still get goosebumps at various moments. It is a time capsule and thank God it is a Betty Board.
Love those explosive Dead endings!!! back in tha'day, the concert hall would be erupting so fantastically and magnificently as they would brilliantly throw those song finale's our way.. I'm hard-pressed to come up with another band capable of those layers of buildings&textures and crescendo's!!!!just awesome and btw, you did a very classy presentation, great job!!! It really does make me feel happy younger generations are reaching out & giving the Dead a chance to be as special to them as they have been to folks like me!!! Cheers
I must say that September 3, 1988 at Capital Centre is my favorite Dew performance. Phil's bass was turned to 11 and he drops massive bombs during the crescendo.
You explained it perfectly at the end. There really are no words for it and how it makes you feel. You can analyze it and look at it from a theoretical standpoint but nothing can explain the magic of the moment. All the different personalities and styles meshed together with the energy in the room from the crowd and the snowstorm outside in the middle of springtime forming a beautiful concoction of emotion pouring out of those amps and off the drum heads. It will raise the hairs on your arms and bring tears to your eyes. Thank God for the soundboards that captured this show. Truly grateful.
I saw the Dead at Stanford in the summer of 83. It wasn't their best time but they brought the house down. I feel so lucky to have seen them. Jerry's playing on this version is sublime - so subtle yet so emotionally charged. There's a radio show in the UK called desert-island discs where they interview a celebrity or distinguished person in their field, and ask them to select seven (maybe eight) tracks that they would take with them if stranded on a desert island. This would definitely figure in my list.
Cornell Morning Dew is the superior version in my book. The tightness in which they are playing, the guitar work from both Bobby and Jerry, and Jerry's voice is so beautiful and soulful when he sings this song. You simply can't beat this version. Cornell 77 and Veneta 72 are in the list of the greatest shows they ever played. So many of the song performances have been stapled as definitive versions. And for very good reason. The band was just ON for these shows. Another great run of shows is late October 74 when they played (it was either 4 or 5 nights, can't remember right now) Winterland in San Francisco. These were the last shows they played before taking their almost full year break and worked on Blues for Allah. But those Winterland 74 shows are just phenomenal to me. Some of the best Dead I've ever heard from their entire 30 year run.
Thank you...as a fan it is so much fun to watch you take this (and other stuff) for the first time and see your genuine reactions. It def. reminds me of back when I first got into the Dead and Phish...so watching your reactions is heart warming. As a guitarist (wannabe...lol) it is very educational. So thanks again...keep it up.
I appreciate Michael's Dead journey. I only really "got" the dead when I listened to them on 4 grams of mushrooms in 2020 at the age of 50. I had always liked fast and aggressive music with no fat. The Dead, to me, was all fat. The Dead just took so long on the intro and so long to finish the damn song that I never could understand the appeal. Psilocybin gives astonishing attention span and boom, I got it. Now I listen to the Dead (99.9 percent of the time w/ no plant medicine) and I still get it. Better late than never.
That Cornell tape has been in my collection since the early 80s. It’s what hooked me on tapes crusades after the blue dolphin and an exceptional live performance I witnessed of cold rain and snow (it was) opener in the Philly Spectrum in the same timeframe. I love your enthusiasm for the music you break down. Great channel! TY kindly. Best morning dew moment: Alpine valley east troy Wisconsin late 80s (89? I think). An electrified beautiful young girl climbs up out of the pit and promptly sits in front of Jerry as he goes into an elongated lead break - or so it seemed. It felt like an eternity but they let her stay a few seconds before gently carrying her off.
I'm so blessed to have been there in '81 for GD at Hampton Roads. Doug it brings back all those moments of discovery, the journey I took as a young deadhead - to see your joy and more importantly the COMFORT the Dead now bring to you.
I love this version so much. It is truly the climax to the entire show and the St. Stephen -> Not Fade -> St. Stephen that leads into it in particular. Listening to that 3-song set into this just lifts it up even more. The Dead were truly at the top of their game and Betty captured it all in 360 degree technicolor sound :D
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you. Old timer Deadhead here (first show at age 13 in December 1969 at the Fillmore East). Thanks for the enthusiasm you bring to the Boys, all versions of them, and providing fresh ears, insights and knowledge about the music that had added immensely to my enjoyment and clarified why the Dead are special, unique and forever. In 100 years much of the music we listen to will be a memory but I have feeling Grateful Dead will still be being played. Just as importantly, you have introduced me to so many musicians, bands, styles etc and your Reacts/Breakdowns are incredible and something I’ve come to need on a regular basis. So THANK YOU. Shit I don’t play guitar, never had an interest until I started watching your channel, but I’m going to pick one up this spring and subscribe to your lessons... and now a request/suggestion. GD Rockin’ the Cradle Egypt 78. It gets panned a lot. But the Estimate/Eyes is one of the best ever recorded. The Eyes of The World especially. It’s a long one but there’s never a dull moment.
1967, I was in the Navy in Monterey CA. We went up to SF. There was a free concert at Panhandle Park. Jerry and a bunch of other players with a flatbed trailer as a stage. Memorable.
You just got a new subscriber. And I went to my first show as a freshman at Cornell in 81. Not as well known as 77 but rightly acknowledged as another smokin Barton Hall performance. Anyway it put me on the bus, second show later that summer in Denver and there was no looking back. I'm still on tour with the new incarnations and still miss Captain Trips at every show I attend.
I got on the bus late-94, but was lucky enough to see 4 shows. I remember when the internet was getting big, posting a question about where I could find the quintessential Scarlet-Fire and was pointed to Cornell. So Scarlet Fire is good, but this...this caught me. I got the vinyl for Christmas this year. I cried listening to it 25 years later. This is so beautiful. Watching your reaction was like watching mine. You smile at the nuances, close your eyes and let the music take you. You get totally immersed at the ending. As you should. Thank you.
I have loved this song since I first heard them play it back in 1968 in a club in the Village. It was a smaller band back then and if I remember “Pigpen “ the keyboardist sang lead.
very cool, such a beautiful way to end the year. BTW i got hip off of YT reco when i saw '..guitar teacher reacts to Morning Dew' back in like march '20. look at you now 212k and rising. congrats you put in the work and deserve it! keep up the great work, cheers!
Its magic man! Avatars that created magic to blow our minds, open our minds, bring love and bring us together! The Dead always have a way of bringing me to tears no matter how many times I listen to a song! Loved watching your reaction while listening. especially when you looked upwards knowing the sounds you're hearing are indeed divine!
Fuck yeah! I cry every time I hear that Cornell version. You remind me of how it feels the 1st time, and I thank you for that. I needed a reminder of that magical moment. Love and hugs brother. Love and hugs
Masters of dynamics. Everyone’s looking for speed or dexterity or hooks. None of it matters without that level of emotion and commitment. Thanks for sharing in the magic
Nobody discovers the dead. They find you when you most need them.
the bus came by, I got on, that's when it all began.....
Well said!
Once in awhile you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right
This is so ture.
Indeed. One in ten thousand that come for the show. I perceive it as something that's part of my spiritual or musical DNA.
I think that it’s amazing that Jerry’s been gone for 25 years... and yet somehow , his essence still is alive , and always will be . You said it man .. “Love” that’s what it’s all about .. that’s what the Grateful Dead is . The expression of the human existence through music .. brothers and sisters .. music with no net .. alive , searching , lost , and found .
I think Jerry would be very happy to see what you’re doing . You can tell when it’s from the heart ..
Hello Bobby :)
Love you Bobby! Thanks for everything! Dead, Dog, Kingfish, TOO, Furthur, etc. P.S. thank you for bringing Mr. Mayer into the fold.
Jerry will forever be Alive in our Hearts and ears ⚡ Grateful Dead will always be a living and breathing Spirit, long after Weir gone💀
Thank you.
Jerry and the boys built something. Like the pyramids. It's astonishing to see the pyramids or hear the Dead.
Garcia was/is/will forever be the most honest musician I've ever had the pleasure to see.
It was never about how many notes he could cram into a measure of music. It was always about that moment in time. The emotion of that last second. He knew there was as much emotion in the quietness as there was in the aggression. And when he was REALLY ON, the transition between it all was blended effortlessly.
Great observation. Lovely. He was one of a kind.
You say honest, I say genuine haha, regardless, he was the master of doing exactly what was appropriate, when able to, and knowing what was not appropriate in the moment with no warning
Jerry searched for magic, not music.
Very well said. Thankyou
It takes my emotions to the lowest of lows and brings me back up to a new all time high every time I hear this. This is sadness and happiness in one package. It is perfect and will live forever.
My 1st show was 1988 at Madison Square Garden...I was 8. My dad was a taper. We sat right behind front of house. After that night I was hooked to say the least. My dad took me to see them 40 times after that before we lost Jerry. I knew from that moment on I wanted to be a sound guy. And that's exactly what I do now. This band changed my life in so many ways. Thank you for this video. Brought me right back to being at the show listening to what they do best.
I've been a Deadhead since I first saw them in Boston in 1967. Barton Hall was one of the many 1977 concerts I went to. I also have a modest collection of about 4,000 cd's worth of Grateful Dead stuff.
the ARK.
@@UHollis I did go to the Arc in 1969. The 67 concert was at the Psychedelic Market behind Fenway.
Let me know if you plan to sell any of them. 🎸💿💿🇺🇲
This is probably the best live show ever recorded on the planet.
Grateful Dead- Fillmore East - 2/13/70. Give that one a listen.
wasn't this one added to the National Registry in the Library of Congress?
@@jeffsimons2009 yes it was
'Scarlet>Fire' & 'Morning Dew' in that set can stand against any live performance ever & hold their head up high... there's real true magic in the air.
I first heard this show on tape 30 years ago. It makes me happy knowing that 30 years from now I will listen to it again and I’ll get goosebumps then.
The way the whole thing builds and builds and builds along with how all the pieces fit together and play off each other is just musical perfection.
And just when you think they can't build any more, they build even higher!!!
Thank you!! Beautiful job Michael! Cornell 1977 is the best!! I did one lesson on Grateful Dead Sugaree
Nice!!!! I’ll check it out for sure :)
@@charlierichman2669 i saw bob talking about that. What's the deal?
It's A Beautiful thing, was still too young for that show. Didn't start see them till the early 80,s but I must say that is one of the best. Great Year for the Grateful Dead
Dew is a Less is more kinda jam⚡
My daughter is an accomplished musician and she said what Michael said: “You can’t write that..” My daughter was blown away by 5-8-‘77’s Dew and this is a 25 year old who’s been listening to the GD her entire life. Yet this time we just listened to it in the car. Loud. For the first time she really heard/listened intently to what the Boys were capable of doing and she loved it!
I'm shaken. I have listened to thousands of hours of Grateful Dead, I've listened to this version countless times....and yet I was just brought to tears listening to this sitting in front of my computer. Why do I listen to the Grateful Dead?...uhh, that is why.
Same I'm sobbing right now and I couldn't tell you why
that's why! me too
Everytime I hear this song I sob like a newly orphaned child.
I'm shedding tears of joy and sadness all at once. This version does it to me every time.
Man Sugaree can cause the sniffles from time to time
The way Kieth trickles into open the finale jam is so perfect
Amen!! Although I didn't run off on tour til '88, I've always been a Keith guy. Always wonder what goto heaven would sound like with him on it.
He's so amazing. Yes the singing & the guitar & the drumming is god tier here but the piano is just such a fantastically vivid rhythmic presence here & accentuates all the right points emotionally in the song, & it's that that takes this performance over the top for me.
My favorite Dead song bar none. IMHO we owe the power of Cornell to Phil but the layering and weaving that the whole band did that day was beyond epic. It was really cool to see you react to this version of the song. This version has the power to take you to a very special place that I think everyone needs to get lost in so they can come out the other side a truly changed traveler. I wish you all the best in the new year and thank you for the amazing videos. Be well.
Many songs have appeared in my life as "song I'd like to hear last", but none have made that list more than this one. Thanks for reminding those of us who know this song well, what it looks like to hear it again for the first time. You're awesome, Michael-- and we appreciate you bringing your musical talents to the "internet community". Blessings brother.
Thank you, Michael. I wish there was a heart button instead of a thumbs up button for this song. It was the song that made me love the Dead back when I was a young lad of 17 oh those many years ago. This song has stood the test of time since those heady days of 1967. Such a wonderful present you have shared with us. The Cornell Concert in 1977 is such a stand out.
❤
I'm not a musician, heck, I'm lucky that I can play the radio, but I can certainly tell that you went on one hell of a bus ride with this gem. Being an old Head, I saw you taken away. From bobbing your head to the rhythm, to that expression that Jerry was taking it a bit far right before he pulled it back in, to bopping to the beat, to the surprise with the "vibrato" of the band, to the wonderment of exactly where they were going when the music seems to fade to the background, to the 1,000 yard stare when you realized where you have been, to the excitement when the band was bringing it back up from the precipice of death, to the wide eyed acknowledgement when you realized where you were going, to the anticipation of getting there, that my friend is the essence of the Good Ole Grateful Dead. Congrats dude
The Grateful Dead brought us all together, The last year has been a blast!
Yeah man, your discovery of the dead is what made me discover you. The dead was/is such a huge part of my life that I had lost touch with for a few years. Thanks for bringing me back. I am enjoying all your videos and being one of your guitar students, but most of all knowing that we are connected by a deeper understanding. Hope to meet you someday.
THANK YOU for playing the song through. Im 51 and I discovered the Dead in 1984 when I was 15. We are grateful that we found you. You are a young man with a son and I can understand the emotion listening to Jerry sing and play this masterpiece. I wish you could have experienced Jerry in person. It was magical.
That was so awesome watching : listening with you!! Tears rolling down and big smile. The boys whipped it up!!! Shimmers and spikes yes!!!
This is it.....The Dew Of Dews. They are so tight. The way they build this up. Keith is amazing. What a Band.
Loved the cradled guitar swaying throughout Jerry's solo, really warmed my soul to witness. You get it man. Thank you for the content Mike.
This was my most listened to song in 2020 on Spotify
How many other bands can you say this show or that show this decade that decade when listening to one song haha. I had the pleasure for being a tour rat for the last 4 years of Jers run. I have seen the world but still mark those days some of the best in my life as each day each show was an island on to itself. There were days, there were Days and there were days between. Cheers!
Yes they were!
I love when another person gets to feel something like this. Most never encounter or cross the paths with this situation. The dead still move me as they have for years. Glad you got to feel this too.
In all the best performances I've heard of this tune through the years, there's a feeling that it's constantly a millisecond away from disintegrating completely. Like the couple in the landscape of the lyrics, the band barely clings to a remnant of normalcy. A walk, or a tune, performed in the midst of and in spite of the End. This take is like a dream - thanks for checking it out.
Beautifully said
Tony Rice Died Christmas day he recorded with Jerry Garcia a few time as a bluegrass fan you should do a video on this Guitar legend.
Agreed. Fil, the Wings of Pegasus guy, just did one from an early Merlefest...........
Just listened to The Pizza Tapes and toasted Jerry and Tony. Loved the acoustic stuff Jerry was doing with Grisman the last few years
I saw Tony with David Grisman Quintet c. 1975 Catalyst, Santa Cruz...both ends of that tour. Astonishing musicianship...
I was totally awed by Tone Poems with Tony Rice and Dave Grisman, such sweet arrangements and solid mixes...🙌
Was in a hurry this evening to pick my daughter up from gymnastics practice after a terrible day at work and heard this song for the first time waiting in the carline. This song transported me to another place, a better place. From watching you, I think it had the same effect. How have I gone this long without hearing this?? I guess you I heard it exactly when I needed to
I was one of the thousands of people who were hounding you to do this song from this show. So glad you followed through! What an amazing piece of art. Everybody is playing their hearts out on this one!
You in this video perfectly encapsulates how I feel every time I hear this beautiful masterpiece. The full portion of this set is St. Stephen>Not Fade Away>St. Stephen>Morning Dew, and the whole thing is an absolute monster. The St. Stephen>Morning Dew is so natural and perfect that every time I hear St. Stephen I now expect it to go into Morning Dew. My favorite thing about Morning Dew, and this one in particular, is just what you said: how every instrument is just as important as the other and they all take turns sharing the spotlight
Epic example of the band slowly stepping up the intensity ladder from sweet and subtle to a ferocious catharsis. I used to see this sort of thing just rolling off the stage in thick waves over our heads. The band was just saying, "Oh, ya like that? Well here's comes some more times 2, times 10, times 50." They pushed the music to places most musicians can't even begin to contemplate. And we were grateful for every moment of it.
"this is a song written by Bonnie Dobson of Toronto, Immortalized by the Grateful Dead"...Robert Plant 9/15/2002
The Allman Brothers did a stellar version also 🍄
Check out Devo's version.
I was lucky enough in 92 and 93 me and 2 other friends did Dead tour both years in the summer.I would finish my last exams in college then roll out.Saw alot of the U.S and met a bunch of cool people.Some of my greatest memories and ive always love playing Jerry songs.His solos remind me of raindrops hitting a tin roof.
Yup!! The memories we created nearly 30 years ago are still burned in my brain as some of the best days in my life. It’s beautiful and a little sad at the same time as it hard to find things as emotionally satisfying as meeting folks in the lot, seeing/hearing Jer bend time and space then getting a nut brown ale and a grilled cheese at the end of the night. Feels like yesterday brother!
@@MrYatesj1 Don't be sad it's over, be glad it happened.
Jerry G
So glad I found your channel a few weeks ago. Until then I literally hadn't picked up my guitar in like 3 years. I got the itch again and damn it feels so good to scratch it. Keep doin what ur doin dude !
Same. What a great feeling!
Finally!!!! But I'm really interested for Jack Straw of all of the Cornell, I think it will be one of your favorite Dead songs, if you don't know it already. It's my all time favs, and Cornell - the best version EVER
Yes!!! I love jack straw
Y E S
Indeed. Those late 70s jack straws got really dark, and let’s face it, it’s a lyric as dark as they get. It’s almost like it took all those years of insanity and redemption and more insanity from ‘72-‘77 for the musicians to really walk hunter’s lyric.
I’m a big fan of 4-12-78 Jack Straw
10/29/77 without question
I’m so happy that you listened to that all the way straight through.
You get it..your drive home from dropping off son..it just hits you..time to do it..thats what the GD experience is all about..no rhyme or reason..its a life force..after Jerry died, I bailed for 12 years..then I met my soul mate who never heard of the band..no judgements..she was 23, I was 40..then I started taking her on the journey..tears came. I missed it so much..watching her experience even on video what I had brought me back to the living. Then, finding your channel, watching a professional experience it, made me smile. Love you brother!
I love that people are still getting on the bus after so many years.
Your speechless moment, sums it up better than any words could.
Hope this new year, is better than the last. (~)}:}
I have been waiting for this! I had it cranked, and was laughing out loud as I saw the expression on your face as the intensity built toward the end! I hope you will do another video on it where you unpack what is happening musically in this. I don't play any instruments (alas) but I always learn a lot from your breakdown of the music.
That was cool. I've recently started listening to more dead and finding little gems like this is why I like your channel.
I was never a big Grateful Dead fan until I started watching you Michael! I am so crazy about your videos brother that I find myself lost in them. I play along and try and keep up with you which is next to impossible for me. I so appreciate what your doing and that you bother to take the time to walk us all through these iconic songs. I have a banjo that I break out just for fun and pluck along. Once again Michael thank you thank you. Happy New Year to you and yours. The Muleman.
Thank you! I really needed a boost today and watching someone listen to this recording or the first time was pure joy. I had tears running down my face and a grin from ear to ear. This is one I go back to over and over again. There is so much to take in that every time I listen I get more from it. This version makes me feel all the feelings.
I grew up in Eugene, Oregon during the late sixties through the early eighties. Ken Kesey certainly played a role in my, "formative" years.
Jerry played my high school. Ken brought the boys to an epic 3 night stand being the first "rock" show in the building. Ken warned us to behave so we could get them back for more shows.
So many years later, I'm still running through those shows. Oh man...
Veneta was a hoot too.
@@joeynice123 It's a blurry memory, lol, but I'm fairly certain I was at the first field trip in 1972. My mother loved the yearly Renaissance Faire. She's a goofball from Germany and this, along with the Saturday Market were a huge draw and I was always eager to go.
The difference in the next decades appearance was the addition of Psychedelics. Shows were very different after that...memories!
"When it comes together -- you could never write that, plan that."
And that is the essence of Dead, Dead on a great night that didn't happen every night, but when it did, and it did often enough--then you're hooked.
THE morning dew. This song brings a tear to my eye every single time. Happy holidays everyone.
DID YOU SEE THE PHISH ANNOUCEMENT!!! CHESS IS BACK!!!!!!!
Went to one "chess move" show in Cedar Rapids, IA...95 I believe. Great time!
I knew of The Dead 30 years ago when my parents took me. But wow I still love it. If u know you know
Jerry was the most generous musician ever. Just gave you exactly what you needed.
I'm so happy for you Michael! What a treat to be able to witness you listening to that for the first time.
Having you around in the pandemic was an absolute joy, Michael. Thank you so much!
HE FINALLY DID IT!! :D
I have been listening to the Grateful Dead since before I was born, literally from the womb. This version still makes me weep like a toddler with a skinned knee. It is my happiest of happy places.
"That is a perfect capturing, of a perfect moment, of the complete essence of the band and the people that cherish them..." A perfect statement!
Fall 77 my first show in Philly and still find the tunes inspiring and peaceful. Love this year in particular due to it being my introduction as a freshman in high school. Traveled the east coast for years and was lucky enough to see them at their best
Michael, this is the Holy Grail 😇.... This is by far my favorite live performance and the jams here are the absolute best. Great job, glad you played it straight through w/ no interruption. Take care 😁✌🍻
Best rock and roll band of all time. If that doesn't make you cry with joy, nothing will.
Brother you just read The Dead. “Dark clouds and sunshine “. Glad you got on the bus brother. Stay Grateful
I told him the same thing. He just got in the bus man.
Heard it hundreds of times and still get those goosebumps, JG- 'Magic is what we do, music is how we do it'
I like to comment on every dead song you do... what you said at the beginning about it finding you at the right time in your life is so true. I love your videos! thank you. This cornell 77 series has been an absolute treat. Happy holidays and thank you!!!
Other worldly …..one of best moments in rock n roll history and captured for everyone to enjoy forever
I am personally dedicating this to my late boyfriend Jim, who was a gigantic Dead fan. I think of you always when I hear this song Jimmy ♥️☮️
Best band in the land🤙☯️☮🕉
Thank you!! Nice job on a tune that means so much to so many of us. Well done!! Cheers Michael.
This is the best reaction video ever filmed. Thank you.
A silver lining to this crazy year... and a legacy of the message in the song that takes on extra weight during times of great sorrow and foreboding... Thanks for sharing your reactions with us this year !
The Dead to me is still a gateway to much better times, and a much better mood. They were and are about peace and love. RIP Jerry, Brent, Keith and Ronald.
One of my favorite dead songs!! Merry christmas, Michael!
This is my present. Thank you. How about them drummers 🤙 had the cassettes in 88 onward and still get goosebumps at various moments. It is a time capsule and thank God it is a Betty Board.
Love those explosive Dead endings!!! back in tha'day, the concert hall would be erupting so fantastically and magnificently as they would brilliantly throw those song finale's our way.. I'm hard-pressed to come up with another band capable of those layers of buildings&textures and crescendo's!!!!just awesome and btw, you did a very classy presentation, great job!!! It really does make me feel happy younger generations are reaching out & giving the Dead a chance to be as special to them as they have been to folks like me!!! Cheers
I must say that September 3, 1988 at Capital Centre is my favorite Dew performance. Phil's bass was turned to 11 and he drops massive bombs during the crescendo.
You explained it perfectly at the end. There really are no words for it and how it makes you feel. You can analyze it and look at it from a theoretical standpoint but nothing can explain the magic of the moment. All the different personalities and styles meshed together with the energy in the room from the crowd and the snowstorm outside in the middle of springtime forming a beautiful concoction of emotion pouring out of those amps and off the drum heads. It will raise the hairs on your arms and bring tears to your eyes. Thank God for the soundboards that captured this show. Truly grateful.
I saw the Dead at Stanford in the summer of 83. It wasn't their best time but they brought the house down. I feel so lucky to have seen them. Jerry's playing on this version is sublime - so subtle yet so emotionally charged.
There's a radio show in the UK called desert-island discs where they interview a celebrity or distinguished person in their field, and ask them to select seven (maybe eight) tracks that they would take with them if stranded on a desert island. This would definitely figure in my list.
Cornell Morning Dew is the superior version in my book. The tightness in which they are playing, the guitar work from both Bobby and Jerry, and Jerry's voice is so beautiful and soulful when he sings this song. You simply can't beat this version.
Cornell 77 and Veneta 72 are in the list of the greatest shows they ever played. So many of the song performances have been stapled as definitive versions. And for very good reason. The band was just ON for these shows.
Another great run of shows is late October 74 when they played (it was either 4 or 5 nights, can't remember right now) Winterland in San Francisco. These were the last shows they played before taking their almost full year break and worked on Blues for Allah. But those Winterland 74 shows are just phenomenal to me. Some of the best Dead I've ever heard from their entire 30 year run.
I saw this in 82 i think spectrum philly
Cryed like a baby
Thank you...as a fan it is so much fun to watch you take this (and other stuff) for the first time and see your genuine reactions. It def. reminds me of back when I first got into the Dead and Phish...so watching your reactions is heart warming. As a guitarist (wannabe...lol) it is very educational. So thanks again...keep it up.
Thank you Michael and Merry Christmas
Thank YOU!
Those are some powerful sounds! Rips your soul out. GD4Life
Not Curtis from Texas
Merry Christmas to you! And THAT is why we still listen after 50+ years! You have your forever music, sir! Enjoy it!
They found me when I needed the dead the most. The most comfortable I have ever been was my first dead show...I love you Jerry and Thankyou!
I appreciate Michael's Dead journey.
I only really "got" the dead when I listened to them on 4 grams of mushrooms in 2020 at the age of 50. I had always liked fast and aggressive music with no fat. The Dead, to me, was all fat. The Dead just took so long on the intro and so long to finish the damn song that I never could understand the appeal. Psilocybin gives astonishing attention span and boom, I got it. Now I listen to the Dead (99.9 percent of the time w/ no plant medicine) and I still get it. Better late than never.
That Cornell tape has been in my collection since the early 80s. It’s what hooked me on tapes crusades after the blue dolphin and an exceptional live performance I witnessed of cold rain and snow (it was) opener in the Philly Spectrum in the same timeframe. I love your enthusiasm for the music you break down. Great channel! TY kindly.
Best morning dew moment: Alpine valley east troy Wisconsin late 80s (89? I think). An electrified beautiful young girl climbs up out of the pit and promptly sits in front of Jerry as he goes into an elongated lead break - or so it seemed. It felt like an eternity but they let her stay a few seconds before gently carrying her off.
I'm so blessed to have been there in '81 for GD at Hampton Roads. Doug it brings back all those moments of discovery, the journey I took as a young deadhead - to see your joy and more importantly the COMFORT the Dead now bring to you.
I love this version so much. It is truly the climax to the entire show and the St. Stephen -> Not Fade -> St. Stephen that leads into it in particular. Listening to that 3-song set into this just lifts it up even more. The Dead were truly at the top of their game and Betty captured it all in 360 degree technicolor sound :D
Thanks, Michael. You did find the right words to sum it up pretty well! Morning Dew is certainly at the core.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you. Old timer Deadhead here (first show at age 13 in December 1969 at the Fillmore East). Thanks for the enthusiasm you bring to the Boys, all versions of them, and providing fresh ears, insights and knowledge about the music that had added immensely to my enjoyment and clarified why the Dead are special, unique and forever. In 100 years much of the music we listen to will be a memory but I have feeling Grateful Dead will still be being played.
Just as importantly, you have introduced me to so many musicians, bands, styles etc and your Reacts/Breakdowns are incredible and something I’ve come to need on a regular basis. So THANK YOU. Shit I don’t play guitar, never had an interest until I started watching your channel, but I’m going to pick one up this spring and subscribe to your lessons...
and now a request/suggestion. GD Rockin’ the Cradle Egypt 78. It gets panned a lot. But the Estimate/Eyes is one of the best ever recorded. The Eyes of The World especially. It’s a long one but there’s never a dull moment.
… “if I knew the way I would take you home” 🙏🏻
This song is absolute fire.
One of the best covers ever recorded. When I learned to play this... I was in heaven.
1967, I was in the Navy in Monterey CA. We went up to SF. There was a free concert at Panhandle Park. Jerry and a bunch of other players with a flatbed trailer as a stage. Memorable.
You just got a new subscriber. And I went to my first show as a freshman at Cornell in 81. Not as well known as 77 but rightly acknowledged as another smokin Barton Hall performance. Anyway it put me on the bus, second show later that summer in Denver and there was no looking back. I'm still on tour with the new incarnations and still miss Captain Trips at every show I attend.
I got on the bus late-94, but was lucky enough to see 4 shows. I remember when the internet was getting big, posting a question about where I could find the quintessential Scarlet-Fire and was pointed to Cornell. So Scarlet Fire is good, but this...this caught me. I got the vinyl for Christmas this year. I cried listening to it 25 years later. This is so beautiful.
Watching your reaction was like watching mine. You smile at the nuances, close your eyes and let the music take you. You get totally immersed at the ending. As you should. Thank you.
I have loved this song since I first heard them play it back in 1968 in a club in the Village. It was a smaller band back then and if I remember “Pigpen “ the keyboardist sang lead.
very cool, such a beautiful way to end the year. BTW i got hip off of YT reco when i saw '..guitar teacher reacts to Morning Dew' back in like march '20. look at you now 212k and rising. congrats you put in the work and deserve it! keep up the great work, cheers!
Its magic man! Avatars that created magic to blow our minds, open our minds, bring love and bring us together! The Dead always have a way of bringing me to tears no matter how many times I listen to a song! Loved watching your reaction while listening. especially when you looked upwards knowing the sounds you're hearing are indeed divine!
Fuck yeah! I cry every time I hear that Cornell version. You remind me of how it feels the 1st time, and I thank you for that. I needed a reminder of that magical moment. Love and hugs brother. Love and hugs
What a JAM! Thanks for playing it.
Thanks for leaving it uninterrupted...I drifted away in this one. You're a good dude.... keep on trucking
And thank you Michael.
Happy Holidays! "Wishing you and yours" has some really deep meaning this year. We all can't see the ones we love right now, but you bring joy to a large community by doing these videos.
In the past, you mentioned something about how Grateful Dead has been overlooked by so many, even straight up kicked to the curb without even a listen. So, for me (and I feel that I might be able to speak for possibly thousands of others), seeing others experience these shows/songs for the first time truly warms my heart, puts a smile on my face, and tickles my brain, quite like just hearing the boys do their thing.
Thanks again. That was a nice treat to wake up to being 10,000+ physical miles away from my people back home.
Have a Happy New Year...... 12/29/77 is another really great show.....one of "Dick's Picks"
Masters of dynamics. Everyone’s looking for speed or dexterity or hooks. None of it matters without that level of emotion and commitment. Thanks for sharing in the magic
Been a head since 91 and this brought tears to my eyes.
Michael with that secret smile, I'm right here with ya brother
Jer just rips it outta ya
Happy Holidays, man. Love you. This stuff from Cornell '77 is the best. I've never heard a band play that well together. It's magic. On to 2021!