What is the personality type of Grateful Dead - Shakedown Street? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Grateful Dead - Shakedown Street from 1970s Music and what is the personality traits.
Grateful Dead - Shakedown Street personality type is ENFP, but I am INFJ. ENFPs are always under-estimated, and I am no exception. I'm a mover and a shaker. I'm always trying to make things happen, but I'm also a perfectionist, and sometimes it's hard to get things done with me around. The INFJ is well-rounded. They are, as well as any other type, capable of adapting to change. They are capable of adapting to the way things are, and they are also capable of adapting to the way they want things to be.
What's yours?
Shakedown Street is the tenth studio album by rock band the Grateful Dead, released November 15, 1978 on Arista Records. The album came just over a year after previous studio album Terrapin Station. It was the final album for Keith and Donna Jean Godchaux, who left the band a few months after its release. The record was produced by Lowell George (of Little Feat) and John Kahn.
The album received heavy criticism for being choppy and poorly produced. Gary Terch from Rolling Stone said it, "comes across as an artistic dead end," and, "the disco tinges in the latter merely add to the catastrophe". Modern music critic Stephen Erlewine credits the album's struggles to the unexpected use of disco and the primary use of Donna Jean Godchaux. Despite the album's overall criticism, the song “Shakedown Street” would eventually go on to have its own success. “Shakedown Street” was one of three songs composed by Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter on the album to be added to the band's live songbook.