"If you tell the Truth, you don't have to remember anything"
-Mark Twain
"You realize, of course, that everything I say is horseshit." -Kurt Vonnegut

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Santa Clara, CA. June 27, 2015


Set I
Jam                              
Truckin'                                                    
Uncle John's Band           
Alligator>        
Cumberland Blues
Born Cross-Eyed
Cream Puff War
Viola Lee Blues 
Set II
Crypitical Envolopment
Dark Star
St Stephen
The Eleven
Turn on Your Lovelight
Drums
What's Become Of The Baby
The Other One
Morning Dew
Encore
Casey Jones
The "newest" Grateful Dead song on the list is "Truckin'" which debuted on 8/18/70. "Born Cross Eyed" was never played by the Grateful Dead live but was on their 1968 album "Anthem from the Sun." By album they played 3 songs from their first album, 4 from their second, 2 from "Aoxomoxoa," 3 from "Live/Dead," 2 from "Workingman's," and one from "American Beauty."

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Soundcheck June 26, 2015

For those who were luck enough, we got to hear most of the soundcheck last night thanks to Agentphish on Mixlr. The setlist from Levi's Stadium is as follows; Althea, Brown Eyed Woman, Truckin', UJB Reprised, Alligator, Cumberland Blues, Born Cross-eyed, Cream Puff War, St Stephen (with William Tell bridge), The Eleven, Lovelight, Space, and Drums. The picture below is the stage setup arriving at Soldier Field. "There's a band out on the highway, their high stepping into town."

Friday, June 19, 2015

Run Me Out

Well it was 20 years ago that I saw my final Grateful Dead concert. By all means, it is more than a bit surreal that they are booked again as the Grateful Dead. I never thought that I would see the day. It is wonder some to think that these show are the bands final send off.
The show, I'm talking about is the second night of Giants Stadium in 1995. I saw the previous night and thought it was magical, until the "Wharf Rat." Somehow Jerry's brain thought that he was playing "Stella Blue" but his mouth was playing "Wharf Rat" until the song coda, when he caught up to himself. Regardless the show was a magically experience for me and my friend as things seemed to line-up for us. This lifestyle, this band, this music was something that I was looking at investing my time and effort into and there was alinement in my trajectory with the band. Even though I was pretty silly of me to be proud of dancing through all of Drums and Space. Yet at the end of the night, I had just seen my first show on LSD and Jerry sang "Lucy in the Sky," so I was taking away from it that there was a mystical connection.
The next night, I saw some of these connection dissolve into uncertainty. For this night I was on the floor, instead of in the 300's. I thought that the first set of this set had more energy than the previous night and was hopeful that the second set would kick it up a notch. The "Aiko" was a fun opener and then the band slowly build into a request the previous night. Before the second set the night beforehand the audience in the 100 level started a long chain of interlocked glow sticks, as a way of requesting "Unbroken Chain." This night got the "Unbroken" but the song was spoiled by Jerry's guitar going dead right as the instrumental break came through. Steve Parrish was running like a madman around Jerry's rig as he fumbled with his guitar and petals. People found it odd a couple of years ago, when Phil plowed through "Unbroken" with Furthur, when Bobby went down, but this was a similar type of deal. The show must go on.
Jerry didn't appear on "Space" and he missed half of the "Other One" with more guitar problems. To me that, "Stella Blue" was a heart felt note. A brilliant apology to the evening technical problems. Then Jerry topped off the show with a fond Fare Well.
Yet there is some regret when I look back on my last show, not because it was my last show but because it should not have been. My buddy was going up to Albany for the two shows at the Knickerbocker Arena and I was going to go with him until my mom talked me into going to my Senior Prom instead. Her comment was, "The Grateful Dead has been around since I was young. You'll have plenty of times that you can go see them." Turns out she was wrong. So when she tries guilting me into not going to Chicago, I remind her of this and continue my obsession with the first weekend in July.
So my hypothesizing over the last month made me reflex on the 20th anniversary shows the band played on 6/14, 15, and 16th of 1985. The shows were full of the GD standards like "Scarlet/Fire," "China/Rider," "Sailor/Saint," and "Terrapin." But the band also took time to nod to the future by debuting out "Keep On Growing." As well they took time to pull out some gems from their years past, such as the first "Comes a Time" in 5 years. Then brief resurrection of "Cryptical Envelopment" which had not been played since 1972 and had only been played once since then.
So this Fare Thee Well, 5 show run, what will be the curveball. When Phil came back to the stage after his liver transplant in 1999, the revival of "Viola Lee" literally came out of no where. I don't remember anyone calling that one. In the years since them "Viola Lee," "Golden Road," and "Weather Report Suite" have all seen the sunshine on a regular bases. I have called "HC Sunshine" as an opener on 7/3 because one of the first interviews I read, Trey mentioned listening to shows from 1973. Then in the Wall Street Journal article Bobby and Trey talk about having about 90-100 songs charted. At between 18-20 songs a show, that means no repeats for all 5 shows. Happy, happy DeadHeads.
Like it or not "Drums" is going to played all 5 nights. I can't see the set up Mickey and Billy have been posting online just being there for "Stagger Lee" and "Ramble On Rose." This also means there will be late set transitions to those dreamy Jerry ballads each night. Five nights, five different songs. "Dew," "Wharf Rat,""Stella Blue," "Days Between," and "Standing on the Moon" could be the five ballads. But what if they open with a "Dew?" Or slide a "Standing on the Moon" as a first set closer? Out of a "To Lay me Down?" That would make room for "Comes a Time," which might make me hit the moon. I also think that there is a rare song that is similar to some of the slower Phish ballads and that is "If I Had The World To Give."
That would pretty much blow peoples mind. Yet I do not think that that would be the gem that gets revived in this atmosphere. The bust out song that I'm going to predict for the weekend in Chicago is "Blues for Allah." I believe that it will fit in the middle of the set and be one of those "Blues for Allah>Drums>Blues for Allah" type jams.
I can honestly say that I'm already thinking about Fourth of July weekend more than I should. I am driving there and back from NYC area. I have family there and hope to do some yoga each day at Cyoglab there. I love to meet up with as many people as possible, best way is twitter HERE or email playingintheheartofgoldband@gmail.com. And we will be "dancing in Chicago!"

Friday, January 16, 2015

The Grateful Dead 50

So word was officially announced today, the core four will reunite for 3 shows in Chicago at Soldier Field. The site of the final Grateful Dead show will host them on July 3rd, 4th, and 5th. These are billed as the final performance by Billy, Mickey, Phil and Bobby. This is also the first time in 20 years that they are using the name The Grateful Dead. So forget about that time in November of 1995, in the St Lawrence dinning hall that CNN flashed a video of the band's Radio City gig and proclaimed that the band released a statement that they would no longer play gigs as the Grateful Dead.
The core four will be joined by Trey Anastasio on guitar, Bruce Hornsby on piano and Jeff Chimenti on keys. A very interesting band for the celebration.
Here are the links you'll need; dead50.comgdtstoo.com, and the video announcement by Trixie Garcia via YouTube. After watching that check out mail order instructions HERE. Then check out this first interview with Trey and Bobby HERE.
I'll be at the shows, its what a DeadHead does, and will try to post reaction and pictures of each of the shows.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Grateful Dead in 1965

In 1965, Pigpen convinced the other members of the Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions to leave behind their acoustic instruments and evolve into an electric blues band. The other members, Bob Weir, Bill Kreutzmann, Jerry Garcia and Dana Morgan Jr, were all more than willing to participate. Though they went electric, most of their material did not change. Their song repertoire consisted of traditional covers that now became louder.
They lined up a bunch of gigs at a suburban San Francisco pizzeria named Magoo's Pizza Parlor. They played there on a weekly basis then would practice at Dana Morgan's Music Shop. One of these Magoo's gigs was attended by Phil Lesh and his girlfriend. After reconnecting with Phil at the gig, Jerry approached Phil about learning bass and serving as Dana Morgan Jr's replacement, despite the fact that it meant they would lose their practice space. Phil was a trumpet player but was known to have perfect pitch. Phil agreed to join although he thought that he was going to be playing rhythm guitar because of what he was hearing in the Rolling Stones song "The Last Time." There is no record of Jerry asking Bobby, Pigpen, or Billy before asking Phil to join the band. After practicing the bass for a few weeks, Phil played his first gig with The Warlocks on June 18 of 1965 at Frenchy's in Hayward, California, their first gig not at Magoo's Pizza Parlor in Menlo Park. 
While flipping through records, the newest member of the band discovered that there was another band out there that had the name The Warlocks. This New York band lead by Lou Reed, had gotten the name published before the San Francisco Warlocks. So the band without a name had studio time in November as singer Jon Hendricks' backing band. As a bonus they got to record some of their demos after completing his song "Fire in the City." The boys used the temporary moniker of The Emergency Crew for this recording. They decided on the name in the studio. These recordings were put out as the CD "The Birth of the Dead" in 2003, although "Fire in the City" was the B Side for Jon Hendricks in 1966. 
As the legend goes, the band was sitting around throwing different possible band names around, when Garcia took an Encyclopedia Britannica off the shelf. Flipping threw the pages, he focused on The Grateful Dead. It was in the encyclopedia as a folklore of a spirit who karmically repays the person responsible for taking care of their burial. No one else in the band hated the name, but nor did they love it. Yet much like their previous name of The Warlocks, there is a mystical and spiritual energy that surrounds the name. 
Around this time, Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters started posting signs around San Francisco asking, "Can you pass the Acid Test?" The band member attended their first Acid Test as participants before being asked to be the musical guest. The band made their first known appearance as the Grateful Dead at the San Jose acid test at Big Nig's House on December 4th, 1965. To say they "played" the Acid Test is being generous. More they brought their instruments, drank the Kool Aid, and let what ever happen for the next 8 hours. If you think about it, the phrase "anything can happen at a Grateful Dead concert," stems from these experiences at the Acid Test. Not only that but the friendships that the band had with the Merry Pranksters, Mountain Girl, Rock Scully, and their soundman Owsley "Bear" Stanley, all originated from the early Acid Test.
Besides the officially released recording, there isn't much recorded history of The Warlocks or The Grateful Dead in 1965. Songs like "You Don't Have To Ask" and "Can't Come Down," the first recorded song by Jerry Garcia, were extremely rough around the edges and therefore abandoned shortly after their conception. Yet in 1965, they chose some of their Jug Band songs that would last all 30 years of the Grateful Dead history and beyond. "Cold Rain and Snow," "Don't Ease Me In," and "I Know You Rider" were all traditional songs that the band played in 1965 that lasted to the final tour in 1995. It's pretty remarkable that the band kept those songs current in their lineup. If you look at Bob Dylan's "30th Anniversary Concert," none of the songs at that show were on his first album. Actually in 1965, the band played two Bob Dylan songs; "She Belongs to Me" and "It's All Over Now Baby Blue." The latter was a song that Jerry sang until February 19th of 1995. 
Although the San Jose Acid Test was the first appearance by The Grateful Dead, the first concert wasn't until December 10th. The band played the Fillmore Auditorium with Jefferson Airplane, Great Society, John Handy Quintet, Mystery Trend, and The Gentleman Band. Bill Graham who put on the Mime Troupe Benefit, was not keen on the new band name and printed the poster as saying; "The Grateful Dead (Formerly The Warlocks)." This would come into play much later on in Grateful Dead history. The band that started as a Jug band over the course of the year, grew into a drug band who appeared in three Acid Tests in December of 1965. All in all 1965, was a period of growth by the band. There was some form of direction that they had, even though it was still immature. 

Thursday, January 1, 2015

GD 50

Twenty five years ago, the Grateful Dead rang in the New Years from Oakland Coliseum Arena in fine style. The band is coming off a fall tour which some see as the best tour of the decade. This New Years run picks on this energy and runs with it. The fall tour and this run also saw Garcia do something that he hadn't done in 10 years, he came to stage with a guitar other than the Tiger. Jerry started playing the Tiger on August 4th, 1979 and played it exclusively till the fall of 89. The supped up Wolf made sporadic appearance starting on Bobby's birthday, which would later be released as "Nightfall of Diamonds." The night beforehand Jerry played the Wolf but then went back to old reliable for New Years. Download the SBD of this New Year show HERE.
 Bob Weir comes to the microphone after New Years to joke, "I hear this is the start of a new Dick-aid, I mean decade." A collective grown lets out as the drummer play him a clap. As most are aware, 2015 marks the 50th anniversary of the Grateful Dead and also the 20th anniversary of the loss of Jerry Garcia. The fans have been impatiently pointing fingers at the core four to put their differences aside and dust off those rusty strings one more time. Rumors have been bouncing around but nothing has been confirmed, except from Phil who has put together Grateful Dead retrospectives at Terrapin Crossroads. He is planning to play Grateful Dead material from a designated year for each different night. A cool concept but what about the other three original members. Well last night's season greeting from Mickey Hart might have shed some light on the rumors that have bounced around. In his statement Mickey wrote, "The bird gave me the word. 2015 will be even better. Our long strange trip continues."All DeadHead's know "Bird Song" was written for Janis Joplin, and in the years since Jerry passed, it was common for them to sing "All I know HE sang a little while than flew off." Is Jerry that Bird, metaphorically speaking. We'll be waiting. We'll be ready to fly off.
I: Sugar Mags, Touch, Woman, Big Boss Man, Memphis Blues, Shakedown
II: Countdown, Iko, Victim, Dark Star, Drums, Space, Fantasy, Hey Jude, GDTRFB, T Stones, NFA
E1: Brokedown, SSDD E2: Midnight Hour

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

1940 Xmas Eve

If you don't follow me on social media, then you don't know that I started a secondary site that is a musical companion to the book "Postitively Garcia." It features downloads of all the shows Howard Weiner mentions in the book. All twelve chapters are up there and if haven't gotten yourself a present for Christmas, I strongly suggest purchasing this book to make you holidays Jerry, health, and wise.