Tag Archives: Dead & Company Summer Tour

Dead Riverbend

I don’t know about you, but whenever I hear the word River or Bend, my first thought is instantly 6-24-85. I listened to that show so much as a kid, I kept 3 copies of it just in case something happened to the other 2. The first set was 8 songs. They were good. The second set was the kind of stuff that made the Dead and all of US Grateful. From the Iko and Weir’s “Why Chompa Chula go on Chomp Chomp Chomp” line to the U.S. Blues encore, that night was wrapped in stardust. I still laugh every time I hear Weir sing that line! It’s like theme music for a TV show called, “When Improv Goes Wrong”. Like most of those moments in GD Land, they’re part of our emotional and psychological treasure forever. That second set was a special one. The He’s Gone that melts into Smokestack with perfection, The Cryptical Sandwich that includes Comes a Time as its primary source of meat. Any night you got Comes a Time was a GRATE night regardless of what preceded or followed. The Summer of 85 was Garcia’s out of the Black and into the Red Tour in more ways than one. I don’t know if he had a bunch of red shirts or just stayed high long enough that year not to sleep or change clothes. Maybe 1985 was really just one long day for Garcia. Those gray corduroys probably walked away by themselves after Garcia finally got out of em. The year that celebrated the 20th Anniversary of our favorite band was a year jam-packed with special shows and magical moments. It was the year I got sucked into the vortex forever and it has been the most dominant and continuous thread in the fabric of my existence ever since. Little did we know, Garcia was slowly heading into a major speed bump in his life and one of the most dreadful times in our band’s history. None of that was readily apparent to US on the outside that year because the music was reaching new levels of expression and discovery. Songs were finding new lives and their delivery was growing and changing. Set lists were being shuffled around and some of the most mind-bending music was being played with incredible consistancy. Those were the days…

Fast forward 31 years and we find a lot of similarities. 3 of the original cats along with 3 new ones took the stage in Riverbend last night. The first set was 8 songs. They were good. The second set was the kind of stuff that’s bringing the magic back to the musical landscape of our present. I’m not the biggest fan of Phil’s singing, but Box of Rain is one of those tunes that I always love hearing him sing. I’d LOVE to hear Oteil get a few tunes to sing but after the 50th Anniversary Shows, I think the band just has a phobia about letting a bass player sing for a while. Regardless, Box Of Rain was great and the Psychedelic Stew started brewing as early as the song’s first solo. John bent it out of shape a little and let it wander almost as if it was losing its way along with everyone else before the shapeless took shape once again. His vocals along with everyone else’s did the tune justice. The harmonies are improving nightly as is Jeff’s volume. Then came the Viola Lee Blues, and shit starting getting funky spiritual. A song whose lyrics could fit on the back of a business card yet just as incredible of a creation as the masterpieces penned by Hunter and Barlow. The song began and slowly the jams got packing, left home, got married, got divorced, had a couple of kids in between and came back just in time for another brief verse. I began flashing back to those moments seeing the Dead when the jams started getting so far out there and bending so hard that I’d begin to wonder if the band forgot what they were playing only to realize at the same time that I forgot what the fuck they were playing to begin with… While my mental groundedness has improved considerably since then, the potential for those moments to be experienced were readily available last night.

Uncle John’s made its way through the melted down quagmire that Viola Lee left behind while roaming into outer space and sent everybody continuing happily along the road of intense character development. I really was digging the reggae segments that found their way into a couple of tunes last fall and hope they find their way back. The first notes of Chinacat have a way of instantly removing any inhibition or struggle being experienced and it always feels like a magical door of life is opened before me. I pass through it utilizing some of my happiest dance moves that work themselves out from the center of my soul without any effort of my own. As that tune advances through it’s progressing intensity, our smiles advance accordingly. In the midst of the jams between verses, I begin to feel like I’m just observing my flailing body and smiling with unspeakable joy as I make brief moments of eye contact with those around me, as well as those in the distance, that are going through the same fuckin thing! The jams seem to venture far out into the distance before rapidly returning to land right in front of my face over and over again. That’s a wild ride each and every time and that combo of tunes has never disappointed. The pinnacle of that jam was most definitely nailed last night before exhaling powerfully into The Rider. The solos that ensued after the opening verse were highlighted by Jeff wrapping the ivories around my brain. The Piano was loud and crystal clear with Chimenti being given the increasing volume he deserves. Garcia’s line has become a sing along because it typically takes more than 3 people to attempt to fill the gap he left in the music when he exited the planet. Even then, it comes up a little shy of the well-remembered mark but was outstanding none the less.

Coming out of Space, Viola Lee finally made it back home to finish what seemed to begin an eternity ago. Viola finally finished wandering and lay down to rest at the opening notes of Stella Blue. A song that like so many, has an immensely deep meaning within it that seems to get progressively more relevant as every day goes by in this life. Words that so many of us can reverberate with over the years. It all rolled into one and by now we all understand the price to be paid for taking the ride. Nothing has come for free… There’s nothing we can hold… For very long… As I listen, the price that has been paid with my own efforts and my own life takes center stage. The victories versus the setbacks… The completeness of it all constantly at war with the brokeness often found along the way. The internal gratitude that fights to arise from the depths of some of life’s deepest despair… The moments when the circus seemed to move on without me and there was nothing but pavement left… And broken dreams… Then you hear that song… Come crying like the wind… Maybe all this life really is just a dream…

Sugar Mags closed it out with the strength, hope and joy that helps to brush off the challenges experienced during Stella replacing them with the jubilation of a night that gave US all a few more hours to live inside of the controlled musico-emotional realm that’s been created by our favorite musicians. Weir gaining strength after a few days to rest following Bonaroo and obviously feeling up to the task at hand. As the music rolls on it’s beginning to form a distinctive character with a signature that doesn’t mimick The Grateful Dead but holds true to its foundations while growing in a very exciting and spiritually pleasing direction. The chords that get slammed to finish Sugar Mags and lead into the Sunshine Daydream were a springboard into the powerful finish that left everybody with an impression that this thing is growing day to day and show to show. Bob ferociously finishing the night with a few howls that may not be as high pitched as in days gone by but with enough enthusiasm to keep US plenty juiced about the days ahead!

Just like that day back in 1985, U.S. Blues was the encore. You remember Garcia when he would be all amped up at the end and shout out a bunch of “My My My My Oh My Oh MY OH MY MY MY!!!!!!” That shit didn’t happen but the tune that pays homage to all things American and Summertime through the eyes of The Grateful Dead experience was a pleasing way to staple this one into the scrapbook of our lives.

As we roll toward Indy and Deer Creek, it will be interesting to see if John or Bob chooses to play Tiger. It was sent out to visit the band by Jim Irsay, its current owner. He sent it in hopes of hearing it played while attending the shows there. In my opinion, John has nothing to gain by playing the guitar. Weir could play it but it wouldn’t be heard at all like we remembered hearing it. Maybe find out before too long… Enjoy and I Love y’all!

Dead To The Core,

Dean Sottile (pronounced So Tilly)
The Official Home of Unofficial Grateful Dead and Music News & Grateful Dean on Facebook
@gd50th on Twitter

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They’re not all great but when they’re great they’re fuckin GRATE! Dead & Company scorched the air people attempted to breathe last night as our favorite musicians hit us with so many powerful moments it felt like a centipede was kicking our asses. Special thanks go out to the people running Bonaroo and Redbull TV for the amazing and high-quality free stream! Finally, chattering was silenced and the music could be experienced completely and fully. There’s absolutely no reason why streams shouldn’t be available for every show of the tour. Everybody would make more money and most of US would be buyers. Bands with far fewer resources than Dead & Co offer streams of every show on their tours. The current management groups need to get informed and up to date on how shit works nowadays. They’re already running the video to feed the screens, it’s not a big leap to get that from there to the atmosphere and into our homes. Unfortunately, the current groups that run things are accustomed to representing artists that play the same show every night which would make streaming their tour unprofitable and relatively useless. If the band and management companies want to pull in an extra couple of million on tours, with relatively little effort, they should stream the shows.

On with the show! After a jam that resembled a poor stretching exercise, the opening notes of Truckin got things underway. You got the sense immediately that there was something in the coffee pot. There was an inward intensity that was visible, audible and in the process of becoming expressed outwardly. The required tension that exists in between the notes and in the open spaces that surround the environment were well developed and capable of feeding upon themselves. Human effort alone doesn’t make that possible, the invisible ingredient that’s not always available is required. Spoonful and Smokestack Lightning have always been welcomed attachments to Truckin and Smokestack came out of Truckin this time. It was clear that Weir was well rested and in top form. Mayer’s licks decorated the backdrop of the tune with a tastefulness that didn’t attempt to force any more notes than were required. On a sweltering night in Tennesee, what better thing for John to have on his head than a hat made of fuckin corduroy.

Bertha emerged seamlessly out of Smokestack and holy shit balls of fire, out comes Donna! Another flare that was sent up to the heavens to bring down the glory of the Lord in Grateful Dead & Company Land! As Bertha began to ascend, I couldn’t stop smiling if I tried. Even though I was totally sober, the carpet in my living room began growing grass under my feet and I was dancing like I was gonna mat that shit down in a hurry! Oteil hittin the fat strings, Mayer tearing it up and building the vibration as he merged energies alongside Donna, Billy chewing on invisible gum, Weir’s hair growing from second to second, Jeff’s B3 sending perfect puffs of radiant joy into the air! Shit was gettin serious in a hurry and it was clear that everyone was getting pulled into the vortex that can only be created in Grateful Dead Land.

Playin’ had that immediate bounce that didn’t have to get stirred up or provoked in order to gain momentum. The momentum was already inherent in the moment and the band wasn’t trying to make it happen as much as it was all happening through them. Donna was placed properly in the mix and didn’t scream like her foot was caught in a bear trap. Her voice was soothing and adding a color to the mix that was balanced and fulfilling. John’s wah wah jams were outstanding and each moment fed the next moment with an energy that refused to be diminished or exhausted but continuously gained strength. Birdsong came right out of Playin without separation and was fantastic. Shit was just melting together like psychedelic dominos falling one after the other. Then something happened that those of US that have been around the scene for a long time have experienced hundreds of times. Mayer’s range, that has been limited since undergoing vocal cord surgery, got instantaneously healed and made whole. He went high falsetto reaching for a note during Birdsong and it was tremendous. Part of me became a little nervous wondering if the adrenaline might’ve pushed him into that. I was eagerly waiting for his next vocal to see whether he blew up his voicebox or not. Thankfully, it was a genuine healing like someone might experience at a Holy Ghost filled Church. John stretched his vocals all night and it made his sound infinitely better. It’s not that it was perfect everywhere he went, it’s that he was going there regardless. In Grateful Dead Land, we’d rather see you reach for the gold ring and miss than not try at all. I’m extremely happy he’s pushing himself vocally and will continue to send good vibes to his vocal cords along with cases of manuka honey.

Tennesee Jed fell right out of the middle of Birdsong and Weir exercised the inverse styling of lagging back to rush the moment by utilizing his opposing style of singing slightly ahead of the moment and letting the song catch up to him. When it’s working out right, it’s all just working right the fuck out! Shakedown kept pulling water and energy into the ever increasing wave causing it to swell more and more. Then came the reappearance of one of my favorite surprises during FTW last year, Passenger! It’s gonna need a little work but it was great to hear, particularly with Donna who by all means should’ve been part of the 50th celebration. The lyrics that were previously left out on the studio version, as well as most, if not all other versions I’ve heard, were added this time around. I can clearly see why they were previously omitted. That’s all I’m gonna say about that… Birdsong came back to be finished as John picked up his Gibson SG that must be a 1963 model or thereabouts based on the Gibson Maestro Vibrato with the long metal medallion that stretches from the end of the vibrato to the tailpiece. I’m no Rick Harrison from Pawn Stars or anything but the tone of that SG is SWEET! Closing out the first set with Casey Jones completed the best first set that I’ve heard Dead & Company play since their start.

After the shortest intermission in the history of the band, They picked up right where they left off as the opening chords of Help On The Way let us all know that there was no letting up on this night. The jams were coming out from the band infused with the magic that caused all of US to quit our jobs and follow the feeling for the past five decades. While people will discuss the various incarnations of our favorite musicians since the anointed one left us, this group of players have a chemistry between them that dwarfs anything that has happened since. John is comfortable with his place and is stepping up to lead some of the jams without trepidation. It’s as if he’s no longer seeking permission internally from the rest of the band to let it go. John’s internal beacon just outshines most of his predecessors. He’s off the leash that he may have created for himself or felt compelled to stay tethered to out of respect for the process and the material. It’s a much more free and uninhibited expression of his gifts. When things are going that way, you feel like you can grab the tail of the magic dragon. There are moments where he might realize he can’t quite grab it just yet but they will always be overlooked and forgotten in favor of the times he’s able to take hold of the prize.

Slipknot gave way to Scarlet somewhat awkwardly because Franklin’s belongs there. In all of our minds, we already have the pace stepped out in our dance routines for the onset of Franklin’s. Our mind is already at the opening riffs when something else ends up there. It’s like when you expect juice in your cup and then get water. Water isn’t bad, but your expectations definitely alter the sensation. This was a moment where the tail of the magic dragon wasn’t quite captured but was quickly forgotten once everybody caught up to each other about midway through the first set of lyrics. The cameras panned the crowd that displayed the Mayer Influence. It was full of young people having their molecules transformed as the smell of armpits and patchouli gave way to a new generation scented by Axe body spray and Taylor Swift’s line of perfume. We can only hope the scene doesn’t give way to the fraternity assholes of 93 to 95. Fire kept us burning and came to a fairly abrupt end kind of like rear ending someone in your car at slow speed. They’re not quite sure how to end that one anymore. The opening notes of Terrapin will always bring about a deep cleansing to my soul. My heart opens wide and voluntarily gives itself to the process of growth and change and compassionate human development. It’s the anthem of our entire movement to my physiology. It’s like a slow, steady and certain march into the deep waters of my being. A place where darkness is commanded to the light and where wayward and aberrated thoughts are exposed and forced to leave my heart and my mind.

Before that happens completely, I’m gonna say this… Mickey is back there beating on shit constantly. His hands never stop moving. He reminds me of the guy you work with that makes himself look busy as shit but gets just about nothing accomplished. I haven’t heard a thing he’s played outside of the drums segment since the Summer of 95. If you were at a show and you were blind, you’d probably ask your neighbor what happened to Mickey. You could hear a mouse pissing on a cotton ball better than you could hear a thing Mickey is doing during the show. Every time the camera was on him he was just beating away. Even in the spaces between songs… Couldn’t hear a damn thing. If I was his drum tech, I’d accept being fired and for one night take all of his mallets and kitchen utensils and put nothing but sticks with his gear. Imagine for a moment what this band might sound like if Mickey didn’t completely remove himself from the auditory component by being completely silent. I understand he’s the Magical Maestro of all percussive things and shit like that but he’s completely a non-factor during the music. It’s like a fabulous opera singer choosing to have laryngitis. Not only that… He can stop eating that fuckin beam any time now… I wanna see Mickey lick the beam like I wanna lose a testicle to a gardening accident. I totally love him forever but I had to get that out of my system.

On with the cleansing… Terrapin would have benefitted from extending the vicious jam at the end but that’s like looking for fly shit in pepper. The Other One was filled with all of the confusion required to make it just right. To me, it’s like a Washing Machine on the cycle that just blasts all of the unwanted particles off of your clothing. It turns and twists and pulls your shit into the center only to be spit out along the periphery to be sucked back through the center again and again. Oteil at one point was screwing molecules in the air as he aggressively kept the machine on its proper course. Then in a moment that was akin to Weir giving me the proverbial “Go Fuck Yourself!” after my review of his singing Garcia’s tunes, sung Wharf Rat as good as I’ve ever heard him sing a Garcia Ballad. It was truly his best take on a Jerry tune I may have ever heard. He didn’t lag behind the lyric to be forced into rushing the words and delivered every lyric with the intensity that exists innately in each and every one of them. It was as outstanding as it could have been. Hats off to you Bob! I’ll just go fuck myself now…

Then drop the damn Franklin’s to finish off a stellar night of music and probably the best that I’ve heard from Dead & Company to date. They tried to fuck up Franklin’s by adding spaces that shouldn’t exist between the verses but by that point, we didn’t give a shit. We were all totally spun the fuck out and sitting together in the giant Washer of Life, in the rinse cycle. It was complete before it was completed. Touch was a great way to send us home. Whatever it is we’re going through on this fucked up rock traveling through space, somehow, WE WILL GET BY! They haven’t figured out how to end that one real good yet either. It kinda ends like sex you thought would last a little longer… We’re done? Ok… Doesn’t matter… This was one of those nights that the music was so good that once it’s over the experience made you completely sober and intensely aware of the transformation that took place deep within you. For many, that’s so intense of an experience they have to immediately head for more drugs. Becoming completely awake can be a motherfucker. Some can deal, some can’t… Some rise, some fall… I exited the night a far better human being than I entered. The day was filled with sorrow following the senseless events in Orlando. We all needed a place to be to exhale for a moment. Throughout the course of my life, music has been the only way I’ve been able to begin healing from the various scars associated with life on this planet. My thoughts and prayers are always with those who struggle, mourn are hurting and/or lost. I’m so grateful to have this community to go through all of it with. When you get pulled through the machine that Grateful Dead Music creates, your soul comes out on the other side totally different than it went in. THAT is precisely why this community will live through every cell of my body until I die. At that point, since Energy can’t be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another according to The Laws of Physics and Nature, I’ll be the breeze you feel during Franklin’s or the chills you get during a Morning Dew. My energy will be propelled forward with this music as its guide like it has been for over 30 years of my life. I Love y’all forever and there’s not a damn thing you can do about it! Thanks for all of it!

Dead To The Core,

Dean Sottile (pronounced So Tilly)
The Official Home of Unofficial Grateful Dead and Music News & Grateful Dean on Facebook
@gd50th on Twitter