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@Charly Blanpain

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Kürzlich gespielt

Ripple - American Beauty by Grateful Dead
American Beauty | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:09
Dauer
4:09
St. Stephen - Aoxomoxoa by Grateful Dead
Aoxomoxoa | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:27
Dauer
4:27
Cosmic Charlie - Aoxomoxoa by Grateful Dead
Aoxomoxoa | Grateful Dead
Dauer
5:29
Dauer
5:29
Jack Straw (Live in Paris) - Europe '72 (Live) [Remastered] by Grateful Dead
Europe '72 (Live) [Remastered] | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:49
Dauer
4:49
Playing In the Band - Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [Remastered] by Grateful Dead
Grateful Dead (Skull & Roses) [Remastered] | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:38
Dauer
4:38
Eyes of the World - Wake of the Flood by Grateful Dead
Wake of the Flood | Grateful Dead
Dauer
5:20
Dauer
5:20
The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) - Grateful Dead by Grateful Dead
Grateful Dead | Grateful Dead
Dauer
2:12
Dauer
2:12
Scarlet Begonias - From the Mars Hotel by Grateful Dead
From the Mars Hotel | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:19
Dauer
4:19
Fire On the Mountain - Shakedown Street by Grateful Dead
Shakedown Street | Grateful Dead
Dauer
3:49
Dauer
3:49
Brokedown Palace - American Beauty by Grateful Dead
American Beauty | Grateful Dead
Dauer
4:09
Dauer
4:09

Kürzlich hinzugefügt

Grateful Dead Essentials - From wild psychedelia to rootsy Americana, the Dead blazed the trail.
From wild psychedelia to rootsy Americana, the Dead blazed the trail.
All Things Must Pass (50th Anniversary) [Super Deluxe]
All Things Must Pass (50th Anniversary) [Super Deluxe]
George Harrison
Titel
1
Titel
1
Back Stabbers
Back Stabbers
The O'Jays
Titel
1
Titel
1
Parallel Lines
Parallel Lines
Blondie
Titel
1
Titel
1
Rumours
Rumours
Fleetwood Mac
Titel
1
Titel
1
’70s Hits Essentials - Rediscover the decade’s chart-toppers, classics and lost favourites.
Rediscover the decade’s chart-toppers, classics and lost favourites.
Moodymann
Moodymann
Moodymann
Titel
27
Titel
27
"Heroes" (2017 Remaster)
"Heroes" (2017 Remaster)
David Bowie
Titel
1
Titel
1
Wake of the Flood
Wake of the Flood
Grateful Dead
Titel
2
Titel
2

Empfehlungen

Heavy Rotation - The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Heavy Rotation
The tracks you can’t get enough of lately, all in one place. Updated as you listen.
Your Essentials - The songs you can’t do without. The more you use Apple Music, the more essential they become. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Your Essentials
The songs you can’t do without. The more you use Apple Music, the more essential they become. Refreshed every Tuesday.
Get Up! - Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalised set of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Get Up!
Whether it’s a weekday morning or Saturday night, get going with this personalised set of upbeat music. Refreshed every Monday.
Chill - Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
Chill
Songs to help you relax and unwind. Updated every Sunday.
New Music - Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
New Music
Discover new music from artists we think you'll like. Refreshed every Friday.
Grateful Dead Essentials - The Grateful Dead expanded rock’s horizons with long jams and fierce improvisation, but they also turned their communal aesthetic into a way of life. The band—Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Ron McKernan, Phil Lesh and Bill Kreutzmann—emerged from the same psychedelic San Francisco milieu that birthed Jefferson Airplane and Moby Grape, and the group’s shared house near the corner of Haight and Ashbury during 1967’s Summer of Love became a focal point for the scene. But the Dead would acquire a devoted cult all their own, one that transcended both the geography and the era. From the beginning, they were renowned for their thick stew of influences—rock, jazz, bluegrass, country, experimental composition—and skill at in-the-moment creation.

Their live prowess put them on the map first, but the Dead revealed themselves as songwriters of the first order in their second decade. A pair of albums in 1970, <i>Workingman’s Dead</i> and <i>American Beauty</i>, focused on acoustic guitars and rustic Americana and featured many of the band’s best-known songs, like “Casey Jones”, “Uncle John’s Band”, “Truckin’” and “Sugar Magnolia”. <i>Europe ’72</i> beautifully extended those songwriting ideas into an expansive live setting. As the ’70s wore on, the Dead’s music grew jazzier and lighter, with albums like 1975’s <i>Blues for Allah</i> and songs like “Franklin’s Tower” touching on the sound of jazz fusion; later in the decade, they’d experiment with progressive rock (1977’s <i>Terrapin Station</i>) and even disco (1978’s <i>Shakedown Street</i>). “Touch of Grey”, from 1987’s <i>In the Dark</i>, became an unlikely mainstream hit, broadening the band’s audience for the final decade of their run. Singer and lead guitarist Garcia’s death in 1995 brought a close to the initial iteration of the band, but the Dead’s seemingly bottomless vault of live music (and various post-Garcia offshoots) lives on.
Grateful Dead Essentials
The Grateful Dead expanded rock’s horizons with long jams and fierce improvisation, but they also turned their communal aesthetic into a way of life. The band—Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Ron McKernan, Phil Lesh and Bill Kreutzmann—emerged from the same psychedelic San Francisco milieu that birthed Jefferson Airplane and Moby Grape, and the group’s shared house near the corner of Haight and Ashbury during 1967’s Summer of Love became a focal point for the scene. But the Dead would acquire a devoted cult all their own, one that transcended both the geography and the era. From the beginning, they were renowned for their thick stew of influences—rock, jazz, bluegrass, country, experimental composition—and skill at in-the-moment creation. Their live prowess put them on the map first, but the Dead revealed themselves as songwriters of the first order in their second decade. A pair of albums in 1970, <i>Workingman’s Dead</i> and <i>American Beauty</i>, focused on acoustic guitars and rustic Americana and featured many of the band’s best-known songs, like “Casey Jones”, “Uncle John’s Band”, “Truckin’” and “Sugar Magnolia”. <i>Europe ’72</i> beautifully extended those songwriting ideas into an expansive live setting. As the ’70s wore on, the Dead’s music grew jazzier and lighter, with albums like 1975’s <i>Blues for Allah</i> and songs like “Franklin’s Tower” touching on the sound of jazz fusion; later in the decade, they’d experiment with progressive rock (1977’s <i>Terrapin Station</i>) and even disco (1978’s <i>Shakedown Street</i>). “Touch of Grey”, from 1987’s <i>In the Dark</i>, became an unlikely mainstream hit, broadening the band’s audience for the final decade of their run. Singer and lead guitarist Garcia’s death in 1995 brought a close to the initial iteration of the band, but the Dead’s seemingly bottomless vault of live music (and various post-Garcia offshoots) lives on.
LE CODE - In an ever-evolving French scene, LE CODE will be your essential guide for exploring the local rap game. On this exclusive playlist, you’ll find the best tracks on this side of the Atlantic, from big-name bangers to streetwise indie darlings. LE CODE is regularly updated by our editors, so to stay in touch and never lose a beat, add it to your library.
LE CODE
In an ever-evolving French scene, LE CODE will be your essential guide for exploring the local rap game. On this exclusive playlist, you’ll find the best tracks on this side of the Atlantic, from big-name bangers to streetwise indie darlings. LE CODE is regularly updated by our editors, so to stay in touch and never lose a beat, add it to your library.
Led Zeppelin Essentials - Had Zeppelin broken up in 1970 after just two albums, they'd still go down in history as articulating a whole new heaviness. But that was only the beginning, as the Brits churned out a slew of innovative recordings by shading their bluesy wallop with psychedelia, folk, funk and even reggae. Robert Plant's banshee wail and John Bonham's leviathan grooves reach peak rock heft on the rippling “Whole Lotta Love”. Yet that same band could unplug and deliver “Going to California”—cosmic balladry at its most fragile and glowing.
Led Zeppelin Essentials
Had Zeppelin broken up in 1970 after just two albums, they'd still go down in history as articulating a whole new heaviness. But that was only the beginning, as the Brits churned out a slew of innovative recordings by shading their bluesy wallop with psychedelia, folk, funk and even reggae. Robert Plant's banshee wail and John Bonham's leviathan grooves reach peak rock heft on the rippling “Whole Lotta Love”. Yet that same band could unplug and deliver “Going to California”—cosmic balladry at its most fragile and glowing.
’70s Hits Essentials - Rediscover the decade’s chart-toppers, classics and lost favourites. Our editors regularly update this playlist—if you hear something you like, add it to your library.
’70s Hits Essentials
Rediscover the decade’s chart-toppers, classics and lost favourites. Our editors regularly update this playlist—if you hear something you like, add it to your library.

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