The Arista Years

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (170 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
ALBUM ONLY

Total Tracks: 26   Total Length: 152:07

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Good download, worth the credits!

Jeddygee

I'm not a huge Dead fan (can't stand the fuzzy live stuff) but I am glad to have these tunes. Covers a lot of ground and it is some of their best studio work!

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I Guess They Matter Now

TheRoad

When the Dead went to Arista, I was not buying their albums. I considered it pop. I saw many concerts where all this music became relevant to a Dead Head. I still had none of it until I saw this collection. Turns out its worth having it all.

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A Very Well Selected Arista Collection

Wanderer

The Dead's Arista years were a definite step down from the Warner/Grateful Dead years but this collection includes almost everything worth having from that period. If you are a new or casual fan, you couldn't go wrong getting this and, especially, the Warner retrospective "What a Long Strange Trip It's Been" for a rock solid foundation of this band's music.

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Quick and Dirty

stumbleine

For those who would like a real review, this is a good primer for a beginner and something a Dead fan can burn credits on. bootlegs on archive.org are better than what you'll find here. However, This is a good way to add some Dead to the mix for folks who like the ipod or zune on shuffle.

user avatar

Solid

repmusic

This is just a nice collection of songs, especially for someone who is only vaguely familiar with the Dead and would like to be exposed to a bigger sampling of their music. The collection doesn't paint the whole picture of the Dead, but, then, what could?

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Good music good deal!

driftways

Good music, good deal. If you want to sample tracks, you can listen to 30 seconds of every track with just a click. Let's be positive, people!

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quit yer whinin'

pabella3

Considering that the lucky person that'll grab this will get two discs worth of pretty decent Dead material for less than $10, that's still a pretty solid deal.

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Perfect for the Casual Deadhead

hhjack

If you're like me and am only a casual Grateful Dead fan then this collection is the perfect way to own all the best that the Dead had to offer from the studio in the mid 70's through the late 80's. There's even a few live tracks including the wonderful "Eyes of the World".

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bad business move

EMUSIC-01F486ED

the 'album only' option will drive possible listeners away from this seminal American rock band. Being that there is very little Grateful Dead offered on Emusic, the 26 songs for 24 credits is not such a bad deal in this case... if you're not looking for early Dead. THERE IS NOTHING ON HERE FROM BEFORE 1977.

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No Chance

pappy209

When I see things like this, I know I am going to cancel my membership after my trial period is over

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They Say All Media Guide

This well-chosen compilation makes the best of the eight albums (five studio LPs and three live collections) the Grateful Dead released on Arista Records between 1977 and 1990. The first three studio albums are not well regarded, but by focusing on the stronger compositions, such as “Estimated Prophet,” “Terrapin Station,” “Fire on the Mountain,” “I Need a Miracle,” and “Saint of Circumstance,” the compilers have made them seem better than they did when they were released. It doesn’t hurt that these are the songs that emerged as concert favorites, and if these performances often sound like distilled, sometimes stilted versions for those familiar with the live shows, they nevertheless serve as a kind of blueprint for the music the Dead played in the late ’70s and ’80s. A more confident band emerges in the later tracks, in part because the material is superior — not only the hit “Touch of Grey,” but also “Black Muddy River” and “Foolish Heart,” among others — but also because the performances are seasoned by frequent live playing of the songs. The album concludes with the group’s 1990 live recording of “Eyes of the World” with Branford Marsalis sitting in from Without a Net. The Arista Years presents the sound of a band compromising with, but not capitulating to, the demands of the conventional record industry. Even the Dead themselves were never really able to capture lightning in a bottle, but, as one of their better songs here puts it, they managed to shine “Just a Little Light.” – William Ruhlmann

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