1978Released
5:00

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Shakedown Street - 2013 Remaster. By Songfacts®.

"Shakedown Street" is the title track of the 10th Grateful Dead album, their only one produced by Lowell George of Little Feat. It's one of four Dead albums to use the album title as a song title, with the other three being Blues for Allah, Terrapin Station, and Built to Last.

Though being one of the Dead's more recognizable songs, its intended meaning is unclear. Even David Dodd, author of The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics, is stumped. In his Greatest Stories Ever Told entry for the song over at Dead.net (the Dead's official site), he calls the song one of the Dead's more successful, but otherwise is grasping around in the dark as to what it ultimately means. He does venture the idea that the song is a statement against cynicism, and possibly one meant specifically to "legitimize" disco. On the surface, the song's lyrics speak about urban decay overtaking a street that used to be "the heart of the town." There's subtler stuff buried in the words, though. In the first verse, Garcia sings: Maybe the dark is in your eyes You know you've got such dark eyes (Lyricist Robert Hunter's words) This seems to be implying that it's not the street that's been beaten down and broken up, but rather the observer. There are other parts that seem sort of accusatory, such as "it's not because you missed on the thing we had to start" and "maybe you had too much too fast." One part of the song, in particular, suggests that perhaps it was inspired by a specific encounter with a specific person. This comes in the third verse with the lines: Since I'm passing your way today (Well, well, well—You never can tell) I just stopped in 'cause I want to say (Well, well, well—You never can tell) I recall your darkness when it crackled like a thunder cloud don't tell me this town ain't got no heart when I can hear it beat out loud (Note: In Box of Rain, the collected lyrics of Robert Hunter, the words beat out loud are the only ones in the song italicized for emphasis.) It's tempting, of course, to think the song is about the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in San Francisco, which was a crucial location for the Dead in their early days when that area was the epicenter of the hippie movement. The area had indeed seen some rough times in the late '60s, as the hippie scene degenerated into one of crime, violence, and hard drugs. Still, Hunter's said nothing to confirm or deny this assumption.

Within the lyric there are two possible references to other songs. The repeated line "you never can tell" harks back to Chuck Berry's "You Never Can Tell." The song's second line, "the sunny side of the street is dark," recalls "On the Sunny Side of the Street."

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Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Shakedown Street - 2013 Remaster.
CKey
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
109BPM

Album

The album Shakedown Street - 2013 Remaster is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Shakedown Street - 2013 Remaster.
Grateful Dead/Rhino
© 1978 Grateful Dead Productions
℗ 1978 Grateful Dead Productions. Marketed by Rhino Entertainment Company, a Warner Music Group Company

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