Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
TracksMississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodleloo (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Jack Straw (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), To Lay Me Down (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Ballad of a Thin Man (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), When Push Comes to Shove (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), New Minglewood Blues (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Cumberland Blues (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Deal (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), When I Paint My Masterpiece (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Let It Grow (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Brokedown Palace (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Scarlet Begonias (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Fire on the Mountain (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Samson and Delilah (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Terrapin Station (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Rhythm Devils (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Space (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Goin' Down the Road Feeling Bad (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), I Need a Miracle (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Dear Mr. Fantasy (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Hey Jude (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), All Along the Watchtower (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Knockin' on Heaven's Door (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), China Cat Sunflower (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), I Know You Rider (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Estimated Prophet (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Eyes of the World (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Rhythm Devils (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Space (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), The Other One (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Wharf Rat (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Throwing Stones (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988), Not Fade Away (Live in New Jersey April 1 1988)
NotesRock's longest, strangest trip, Grateful Dead, was the psychedelic era's most beloved musical ambassadors as well as it's most enduring survivors. They spread their message of peace, love, and mind-expansion across the globe throughout three decades. The group had popular music's most fervent and celebrated fan following - the Dead Heads, whose numbers and devotion were legendary in their own right. Grateful Dead was the ultimate cult band, creating a self-styled universe all their own. The Dead became superstars solely on their own terms as tie-dyed pied pipers whose epic, free-form live shows were rites of passage for an extended family of listeners who knew no cultural boundaries.