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Built to Last is the thirteenth and final studio album by the Grateful Dead (their twentieth album overall). It was recorded between February 1 and October 20, 1989, and originally released on October 31, 1989. The album was released on CD in 1989 by Arista Records before being rereleased in 2000 by BMG International.
A live version of Dylan's was released on Stolen Roses (Songs Of The Grateful Dead). In 2002, Norway's top country-rock band, Hellbillies covered the song on their live album Cool Tur (Cool Tour). The song was performed with Norwegian lyrics by Arne Moslåtten and is known as "Hinnmann og eg" ("The devil and I" in English).
Listen to the River: St. Louis '71 '72 '73 is a live album by the rock band the Grateful Dead.Packaged as a box set, it contains seven complete concerts on 20 CDs. The concerts were performed in St. Louis, Missouri in December 1971, October 1972, and October 1973.
The Doors, Grateful Dead, Shadows of Knight, Bob Weir, The Blues Project, The Blues Band "The Big Boat" a.k.a. "Somebody Tell that Woman" Big Three Trio: 1955 Peter, Paul and Mary "Bring It On Home" [a] Sonny Boy Williamson II: 1963 Led Zeppelin, Van Morrison, Dread Zeppelin, Johnny Thunders, Widespread Panic, Hawkwind, Canned Heat "Built for ...
Tom Petty Jeff Lynne Mike Campbell ‡ Full Moon Fever: 1989 [22] "Saving Grace" † Tom Petty Highway Companion: 2006 [23] "Square One" Tom Petty Highway Companion: 2006 [23] "This Old Town" Tom Petty Highway Companion: 2006 [23] "Time to Move On" Tom Petty Wildflowers: 1994 [24] "To Find a Friend" Tom Petty Wildflowers: 1994 [24] "Turn This ...
One of the few Grateful Dead songs to have lyrics written by Weir, "The Faster We Go, the Rounder We Get" became one of the Dead's most-played songs (being performed a known 586 times [2]) and most popular vehicles for improvisation, with some performances reaching 30+ minutes in length.
The Lyceum concerts were the last four shows of the Grateful Dead's 1972 tour of Europe. Several of the songs on Lyceum '72: The Complete Recordings were previously released on the albums Europe '72 (1972), Steppin' Out with the Grateful Dead: England '72 (2002), and Europe '72 Volume 2 (2011).
The song was first performed on October 19, 1971, by the Grateful Dead. Aside from Ace, it also appeared on the Dead's Europe '72 live album. After 1972, it became a regular part of the Dead's repertoire, and as might be expected, was frequently heard on Saturday shows; with its short, compact form and energetic crescendoes, it was a popular break from some of the Dead's more challenging pieces.