Released: April 25, 1971

Songwriter: Smokey Robinson Al Cleveland

Producer: The Grateful Dead

[Verse 1]
Maybe you'd like to give me kisses sweet
But only for one night with no repeat
And maybe you'd go away and never call
But a taste of honey is worse than none at all

[Chorus]
In that case I don't want no part
That would only break my heart
Well, if you feel like loving me
And you've got the notion
I second that emotion
Well, if you feel like loving me
And you've got the notion
I second that emotion

[Verse 2]
Maybe you think that love would tie you down
You ain't got the time to hang around
Maybe you think that love was made for fools
So it makes you wise to break the rules

[Chorus]
Oh, little girl, in that case I don't want no part
That would only break my heart
Well, if you feel like loving me
And you've got the notion
I second that emotion
Well, if you feel like loving me
And you've got the notion
I second that emotion

[Instrumental]

[Chorus]
In that case I don't want no part
That would only break my heart
Well, if you feel like loving me
And you've got the notion
I second that emotion
Well, if you feel like giving me
A lifetime of devotion
I second that emotion

Grateful Dead

Amidst the growing counter-culture scene in the San Francisco Bay Area, The Grateful Dead were founded by lead guitarist/vocalist Jerry Garcia, bass player Phil Lesh, rhythm guitarist Bob Weir, keyboardist Ron “Pigpen” McKernan, and drummer Bill Kreutzmann in Palo Alto in 1965, originally as The Warlocks. Percussionist Mickey Hart later joined the group in 1967 and other members cycled through the group in following years as the core remained intact. Their eclectic music formed the archetype for the “Jam Band” genre, combining elements from rock, blues, folk, country, bluegrass, and psychedelic music into improvisational performances.

Over the years the Dead released 22 recorded albums, although they were most famous for their improvisational jams at concerts, earning them a cult-like following of self-proclaimed “Dead Heads” who would follow the band from concert-to-concert throughout the band’s career.

The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994 and they’ve sold more than 40 million albums in total; all that with only one top 40 hit (“Truckin”), and one Top 10 hit (“Touch of Grey”) that came near the end of the band’s run, shortly before Jerry Garcia’s death in 1995. Grateful Dead was also ranked 57th in Rolling Stone’s “The Greatest Artists of All Time” issue in 2004 and 2005. Since then, various incarnations of the Dead have continued to tour, although a 2015 farewell tour was said to be the band’s last.