I just played along with the WOTF version. I agree with Harry that it is in 4/4, except between the end of the verse and the chorus is a cut measure (2/4). Also, there is a cut (2/4) measure at the end of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th lines of the bridge.
It's funny how I've heard this song so many times that I know how it goes, but when I start counting in my head, it seems weird!
Bill, tgo
Its funny...going back and listening to it again Im not hearing the 2/4 measures you are talking about, but I think I am hearing/feeling them in other places as counting 4/4 all the way through the tune doesn't exactly feel right, so Im sure they are there, Im just feeling them in different spots. Than again I haven't gotten to the WOTF version yet, only live versions from the 70's and some Dead and Co. versions. I'll probably sit down with WOTF later today
By bridge, you mean what's listed as the "Thats the way it's been in town " part? If so Im not really able to feel anything in 2/4 there either.
It is really an odd tune, and even after spending more time on it I still find it to be the most difficult and challenging Dead tune I've played. What seems to confound the issue also is that there are live versions by the G.D. out there that have what sound like mistakes in them but the band handles them fairly well and they end up sounding intentional (almost).
I think the vast majority of G.D. tunes people can walk up onto a stage and play unrehearsed, but this one is really a tune that everyone in the band has to have a pretty firm understanding of if they want to pull it off well.
I'd have love to have been a fly on the wall when Garcia and everyone else were in the studio working this one up. I wonder how much of its uniqueness/strangeness is from them just doing something because it sounded like a cool thing to do v.s. it being something well thought out.
I'm really half tempted to send this one off to one of those professional transcription services to see what they come up with...