Grateful Dead - Go to Heaven

Grateful Dead - Go to Heaven
3




Album Details

Title: Go to Heaven
Artist: Grateful Dead
Release Date: 4/28/1980
Re-Released On: 0/0/1980
Label: Arista, Arista Records, Grateful Dead/Rhino
Duration: 38:19
UPCs: 078221818124, 4988017095997, 078221833219, 4007192611461, 603497977574
Genre: Rock
Styles: Soft Rock, Album Rock, Jam Bands
Moods: Carefree, Druggy, Freewheeling, Knotty, Searching, Spacey, Trippy, Amiable/Good-Natured, Enigmatic, Lazy, Meandering, Messy, Organic, Plaintive, Relaxed, Rollicking, Soothing, Summery, Calm/Peaceful, Complex, Dreamy, Earnest, Gentle, Indulgent, Passionate, Reverent, Rousing, Wistful, Boisterous, Confrontational, Intimate, Laid-Back/Mellow, Reflective, Rustic, Self-Conscious, Ambitious, Atmospheric, Autumnal, Bittersweet, Detached, Earthy, Energetic, Literate, Sentimental, Street-Smart, Sweet, Poignant
Total Copies: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Alabama Getaway
  2. Far From Me
  3. Althea
  4. Feel Like a Stranger
  5. Lost Sailor
  6. Saint of Circumstance
  7. Antwerp's Placebo (The Plumber)
  8. Easy to Love You
  9. Don't Ease Me In

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2008CDGrateful Dead/Rhino
1990CDArista Records8181
1980CDAristaARCD-8181

Similar CDs

Album Review

Time has somewhat mellowed the general disdain that critics and Deadheads alike leveled at Go to Heaven upon its release in May of 1980. Granted, none of these readings come close to their perfunctory live counterparts. However, that argument holds true for a vast majority of the Dead's studio catalog -- which had now grown to include 16 albums. Additionally, this disc marked the beginning of keyboardist Brent Mydland's tenure -- who had joined the band in the spring of the previous year and would remain for a decade. All eight of the songs -- not including "Antwerp's Placebo (The Plumber)," which is a 38-second instrumental percussion track -- had either already worked their way into the Dead's live performance repertoire, or would in due time. These include "Althea," "Feel Like a Stranger," and "Saint of Circumstance," as well as the raucous rock & roll opening cut, "Alabama Getaway" -- which was likewise often the band's opening number in concert during the early '80s. (In a somewhat Prankster-esque sense of irony, "Don't Ease Me In" -- the disc's final number -- also closed many a first set during this era; additionally notable about the track is that it was one of the first songs the band performed back in 1965 -- when they were known as the Warlocks.) In terms of the quality of material, Go to Heaven includes few gems. Primary among them are Bob Weir's "Lost Sailor" and "Saint of Circumstance" pairing. While obviously not as thoroughly developed as it would become in concert, the lilting melody and fluctuating tempos are reminiscent of his "Weather Report Suite" from the 1973 release Wake of the Flood. The groovin' Jerry Garcia-sung ballad "Althea" is yet another example of a tune that would take on bolder and brighter hues as a concert staple for the remainder of the Dead's performance life. ~ Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Betty Cantor-JacksonEngineer
Bill KreutzmannDrums
Bob MatthewsEngineer
Bob SeidemannPhotography
Bob WeirGuitar
Brent Mydland?
Donna Jean GodchauxVocals
Gary LyonsEngineer, Producer
Grateful DeadArranger, Group
Jerry GarciaGuitar, Vocals
Jim WelchProducer, Art Direction
Keith GodchauxKeyboards
Mickey HartDrums
Pete TheaEngineer
Phil LeshBass, Vocals
Stanley MouseArt Direction, Illustrations, Producer