Nearly synonymous with the term "psychedelic," the Grateful Dead reached
 their true peak of psychedelia on their third album, 1969's Aoxomoxoa. 
The band had already begun work on an initial recording of the album 
when they gained access to the new technology of 16-track recording, 
doubling the number of individual tracks they'd used on their last 
album. Fueled by acid and keeping pace with the quickly changing hippie 
subculture of the late '60s, the band went wild with this newfound sonic
 freedom. The exploratory jamming and rough-edged blues-rock of their 
live shows were ornamented with overdubbed choirs, electronic sound 
effects, and layers of processed vocal harmonies. Rudimentary 
experimental production took the band's already-trippy approach and 
amplified it with generously applied effects and jarring edits. In their
 most straightforward songs, Aoxomoxoa's ambitious production isn't as 
noticeable. Gelatinous rockers like "Cosmic Charlie" and "St. Stephen" 
showcase Jerry Garcia's spindly guitar leads and the band's dusty vocal 
harmonies clearly before detouring into wild studio experiments. Though 
the studio mix of "China Cat Sunflower" sounds like the different 
instruments are floating in space, trying to connect from distant 
individual planets, the core of the song still comes through, and this 
number would become a live favorite for the rest of the band's lengthy 
run.
This was the first album where the band brought on lyricist 
Robert Hunter, who would go on to pen some of the band's best-loved 
lyrics. The early glimpses of the Hunter/Garcia partnership that come 
through on the bluegrass-inflected "Dupree's Diamond Blues" or the 
mellow ballad "Rosemary" foreshadowed the complete shift to gentle 
Americana the band would make on their next studio outing, 1970's 
masterful Workingman's Dead. The overly experimental production could 
sometimes obscure the musical ideas, as distorted vocals clashed with 
acoustic instruments or multiple drum tracks ping-ponged across the 
stereo field. The eight-minute epic "What's Become of the Baby" was the 
most glaring example of the album's ungrounded production aesthetic, 
reaching an almost musique concrète level of weirdness with random 
electronic sounds and choppy effects swarming on Garcia's isolated vocal
 tracks.
Aoxomoxoa was so out there that the band themselves had 
second thoughts, returning in 1971 to remix the album in full. The new 
mix dialed back some of the wilder moments and added clarity, but these 
eight songs would remain the most adventurous, confusing, and 
over-the-top productions the band would record. Aoxomoxoa is a prime 
example of the Grateful Dead's difficult relationship with the recording
 studio, which would take different forms throughout their long, strange
 trip. Even leaning wholeheartedly into all the available bells and 
whistles, the band couldn't quite capture with Aoxomoxoa the depths of 
cosmic wonder they tapped into organically every time they took the 
stage. Not without its excellent moments, the album is more a document 
of late-'60s studio experimentation than a huge step in any sustained 
path for the band. by Fred Thomas  
Tracklist :
1     St. Stephen 4:25
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter / Phil Lesh
2     Dupree's Diamond Blues 3:40
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
3     Rosemary 2:02
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
4     Doin' That Rag 5:15
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
5     Mountains of the Moon 4:15
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
6     China Cat Sunflower 4:15
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
7     What's Become of the Baby 8:30
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
8     Cosmic Charlie 5:45
Jerry Garcia / Robert Hunter
- Bonus Material -    
9    Clementine Jam    10:51
10    Nobody's Spoonful Jam    10:10
11    The Eleven Jam    15:05
12    Cosmic Charlie (live)    6:48
Credits :
Bass, Vocals – Phil Lesh
Guitar, Vocals – Bob Weir, Jerry Garcia
Keyboards – Tom Constanten
Music By [The Tunes] – Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh
Musician [Supporting Musician] – David Nelson, Debbie, Marmaduke (John Dawson), Mouse, Peter Grant, Wendy 
Percussion – Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart
Words By [The Words] – Robert Hunter
Written-By
 – Bill Kreutzmann (faixas: 9 to 11), Bob Weir (faixas: 9 to 11), Jerry 
Garcia, Mickey Hart (faixas: 9 to 11), Phil Lesh (faixas: 9 to 11), 
Robert Hunter (faixas: 1 to 8, 12), Ron McKernan (faixas: 9 to 11)
sexta-feira, 18 de março de 2022
GRATEFUL DEAD - Aoxomoxoa (1969-2003) RM / HDCD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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