It’s one of those versions with the final, vocal closing where Bob is screaming his lungs out and Jerry is playing these incredible riffs underneath.” Lemieux is particularly buoyant about the “Bucket”: “Bob is rocking out the place. The “Hell in A Bucket” show opener (which premieres below), as well as the “Shakedown Street” that followed set the tone for a marvelous evening. Everybody else’s playing was inspired as well, which is why it was in such strong consideration for View from the Vault, Volume 2.” He was learning his way into the Grateful Dead and doing some really inventive things. I also think Vince was singing and playing great. “There was a connection between Jerry and Bruce Hornsby that to me was very reminiscent of the chemistry between Jerry and Brent in ‘89 going into ‘90. “I think the entire summer 1991 tour is magnificent,” Lemieux says. The 6/22/91 show marked the group’s debut at the storied stadium where the band would later deliver its final performance on July 9, 1995. On Thursday, June 22, the 32nd anniversary of the original performance, the show will finally get its close-up, when it screens worldwide via the Grateful Dead’s 11 th Meet-Up at the Movies event (an encore presentation is slated for Saturday, June 24, with the list of participating theaters available here). “We nearly released it back in 2001 when we were working on the second volume of the View from the Vault series.” “This show in particular has been on our radar for over two decades,” Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux says of the band’s Jappearance at Chicago’s Soldier Field.
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