
Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Remaster) Robert Hunter
Album info
Album-Release:
2025
HRA-Release:
28.03.2025
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Tiger Rose (2025 Remaster) 03:15
- 2 One Thing to Try (2025 Remaster) 04:16
- 3 Rose of Sharon (2025 Remaster) 03:49
- 4 Wild Bill (2025 Remaster) 03:16
- 5 Dance A Hole (2025 Remaster) 03:21
- 6 Cruel White Water (2025 Remaster) 05:44
- 7 Over the Hills (2025 Remaster) 02:40
- 8 Last Flash of Rock 'n' Roll (2025 Remaster) 03:43
- 9 Yellow Moon (2025 Remaster) 03:39
- 10 Ariel (2025 Remaster) 05:29
Info for Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Remaster)
50th anniversary edition of Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter's sophomore solo studio album, Tiger Rose. Originally released in March 1975, the Jerry Garcia-produced Tiger Rose features contributions from Garcia, Mickey Hart and Donna Jean Godchaux. The Tiger Rose 50th Anniversary (Deluxe Edition) has been remastered from the original analog tapes by Grammy Award-Winning Engineer David Glasser using Plangent Processes tape restoration and speed correction, and includes content of previously unreleased alternate versions.
Robert Hunter, guitar, vocals, mandolin, synthesizer, percussion
David Freiberg, bass, piano, celeste, vocals
Jerry Garcia, guitar, piano, synthesizer, pedal steel, vocals
Donna Godchaux, vocals
David Grisman, mandolin
Mickey Hart, percussion
Pete Sears, piano, bass, organ, tack piano, clavinet
B.D. Shot, drums (B. D. Shot is Mickey Hart)
David Torbert, bass
Digitally remastered
Robert Hunter
joined the Grateful Dead in the fall of 1967, when he arrived at a rehearsal just in time to write the first verse of the band's classic "Dark Star." Though he'd never play onstage, he became not only a genuine band member but its secret Ace in the hole. Though Bob Weir's words for "The Other One" would endure, most of the band's early verbal efforts would not; it was Hunter's work that would elevate their songs from ditties to rich, complete stories set to song. Hunter had fallen into the Dead's general scene in 1961 when he'd met Garcia in Palo Alto, and he'd played in several of Garcia's early bluegrass bands. But he'd always thought of himself as a writer -- probably a novelist -- and it was only in 1967 that he fulfilled his personal destiny, and enriched the Dead's. He's gone on to write several books of poetry, and is currently at work on a novel.
This album contains no booklet.