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George was also a producer and produced the Grateful Dead's 1978 album Shakedown Street, as well as Little Feat's records and his own 1979 solo album Thanks, I'll Eat It Here; he also co-produced a couple of tracks on Valerie Carter's 1977 release Just A Stone's Throw Away. In 1977 he co-produced John Starling's debut solo album, Long Time Gone.
Shakedown Street is the tenth studio album (fifteenth overall) by rock band the Grateful Dead, released November 8, 1978, on Arista Records. [4] [5] The album came just over a year after previous studio album Terrapin Station.
Lowell George "Shakedown Street" is a song by the Grateful Dead. ... After the song's success, many Grateful Dead followers, or Deadheads, used the name for the ...
Their music is also known for its complex rhythms and instrumental improvisations, influenced by bandleader Lowell George's bottleneck guitar work, a defining aspect of their early recordings. Critics often compare their fan base to that of the Grateful Dead due to their devoted following and the band’s turbulent lineup changes. [27]
Selections from the Arista Years is a compilation album that chronicles the Grateful Dead's studio and live albums during their time with Arista Records.This is a one-CD sampler sent to radio stations, record stores, and print media outlets by Arista to promote The Arista Years, which had come out several months earlier.
This box set features all my favorite blues artists like Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Little Walter, Otis Rush, and Sunny Boy Williamson doing songs written by Willie Dixon, whose songs were ...
The Arista Years is a compilation album that chronicles the Grateful Dead's studio and live albums during their time with Arista Records. The album was released on two-CD and two cassette tapes on October 15, 1996. It contains tracks from Terrapin Station, Shakedown Street, Go to Heaven, Reckoning, Dead Set, In the Dark, Built to Last, and ...
"Fire on the Mountain" is a song by the Grateful Dead. The lyric is by Robert Hunter and the music by drummer Mickey Hart. [1] It was commercially released on the album Shakedown Street in November 1978. An earlier instrumental version titled "Happiness is Drumming" appeared in 1976 on Mickey Hart's album Diga with the Diga Rhythm Band.