Grateful Dead - The Best Of The Grateful Dead (2015) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Grateful Dead
Title: The Best Of The Grateful Dead
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Rhino Entertainment Company
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit] / FLAC (tracks + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 2:38:45
Total Size: 3.34 / 1.22 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Best Of The Grateful Dead
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Rhino Entertainment Company
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit] / FLAC (tracks + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 2:38:45
Total Size: 3.34 / 1.22 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
DISC 1
01. The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) (2:11)
02. Cream Puff War (2:29)
03. Born Cross-Eyed (2:24)
04. Dark Star [Single Version] (2:42)
05. St. Stephen (4:27)
06. China Cat Sunflower (3:41)
07. Uncle John's Band (4:44)
08. Easy Wind (4:58)
09. Casey Jones (4:25)
10. Truckin' (5:07)
11. Box Of Rain (5:19)
12. Sugar Magnolia (3:17)
13. Friend Of The Devil (3:24)
14. Ripple (4:11)
15. Eyes Of The World (5:18)
16. Unbroken Chain (6:45)
17. Scarlet Begonias (4:19)
18. The Music Never Stopped (4:35)
19. Estimated Prophet (5:37)
DISC 2
01. Terrapin Station (16:22)
02. Shakedown Street (5:00)
03. I Need A Miracle (3:35)
04. Fire On The Mountain (3:49)
05. Feel Like A Stranger (5:08)
06. Far From Me (3:41)
07. Touch Of Grey (5:50)
08. Hell In A Bucket (5:38)
09. Throwing Stones (7:21)
10. Black Muddy River (6:00)
11. Blow Away (6:11)
12. Foolish Heart (5:12)
13. Standing On The Moon (5:21)
Only the second major career-spanning retrospective of the Dead, The Best of the Grateful Dead -- released in the spring of 2015, just before a series of farewell shows in the summer -- takes advantage of the extra disc 2003's The Very Best of Grateful Dead lacked. Weighing in at 32 tracks -- a full 16 cuts longer than Very Best -- The Best of the Grateful Dead also follows a strict chronological sequence, so it takes a little while for the psychedelic haze to lift and the Dead to settle into the rangy, rootsy groove that characterized so much of their existence -- right around "St. Stephen" and "China Cat Sunflower," both from 1969's Aoxomoxoa. From there, many -- but by no means all -- of the group's warhorses are marched out, all in their studio incarnations. This structure perhaps invites some griping about their sometimes ill-advised attempts to ride commercial waves -- there's no disguising the disco diversion of "Shakedown Street" -- but by celebrating the warts and providing space for that unexpected late-'80s commercial comeback, The Best of the Grateful Dead is a good capsule history of a band that usually defies such straightforward narratives. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine