At 7:29 p.m., the band took the
stage, and during a bit of tuning, Jon and I – as well as those
around us – made our guesses as to what song they’d open with. I said, “Bertha.” Jon said, “Shakedown.” The band said, “Viola Lee Blues.” I was excited to hear
this song, which featured some groovy jamming. After a while, the groove
started to break down a bit, went in some interesting directions, then
suddenly bam, the song took off like a shot, speeding up, racing along. But the
boys still kept a tight grip on the reins, not letting things get too far out
yet, as it was only the first song. They didn’t finish “Viola Lee Blues,”
leaving off the “letter” verse, and went right into “Bertha.” I was happy to
hear it, though it still seems strange to me that they ease out of the “Anymore” refrain now, rather than
delivering the song’s final rousing punch. But anyway, that led right back into
“Viola Lee Blues.” A man handed a woman a glowing water below me, and the band
was cooking along. But they didn’t finish the song this time either, instead just jamming on
it. And then Bob signaled the others and they veered into… what? …a little
tease of “Dark Star”? What they went into was “Jack Straw,” though with a
bit of an awkward start. It wasn’t a very exciting rendition, not at first,
with some uninspired jamming. But then they took us into beautiful territory,
where the eagles filled the sky, and everything seemed to be working well. That was followed by “Big Boss
Man,” the stage bathed in an orange light. A warning? Are we
reading too much into the color orange these days? This tune featured a lively, cool lead
on keys from Jeff Chimenti, and the band eased out with a little vocal jam. Then came “Friend
Of The Devil,” delivered at an interesting tempo. It was slower than the fast
studio version, but faster than the slow live versions the Dead did in the 1980s
and 1990s. Bob sang that extra verse, and the song ended there. That was
followed by “West L.A. Fadeaway,” which had a good slow mean
groove, a groove that could mesmerize, hypnotize you. Yes, my mind wandered a
bit. “Lost Sailor” came as a surprise, and this version was kind of pretty. Ah
yes, “drifting and dreaming.” Of
course, that led into “Saint Of Circumstance,” which was a whole lot of fun when it
kicked in. “This must be heaven.” We
always thought so. Well, almost always. Things went a bit weird there at the
end, off into some slightly spacey territory, but then back for the “Sure don’t know what I’m going for”
part. I thought for a moment that they might then go back into “Viola Lee
Blues,” but as “Saint” was wrapping up, it was clear that was the set closer.
The first set ended at 8:47 p.m., with “Viola Lee” still unfinished.
During the set break, the topic
of conversation, as usual, turned to predictions of second set opener. However,
knowing there is a prepared set list somewhere takes a little of the excitement from the game. I mean, several people knew already. Those folks at the
sound booth, for example. You needed binoculars, not ESP, to figure out the set
opener. Meanwhile, there was an inch of water (I hope it was water) at our
feet, the results of a spill from behind us, we assumed. We managed to get the attention of the security folks, and I alerted them
of the situation, and asked them to radio someone for a roll of paper towels so
we could soak it up. Five minutes later one of the guys returned and handed me
two paper towels. “Will that do it, or do you need more?” he asked. “I need an
entire roll,” I repeated. He said he’d fetch the janitor. Then quite some time
passed, and a few other employees asked us about the liquid and its status. It seemed to be
taking way too many people to figure out how to get us a roll of paper towels.
The guy who gave us the two came back to tell us that the bartender refused to
give him more. Weird. Well, at 9:31 p.m., the lights went out, signaling the
start of the second set, so that was that, we’d stand in water.
And what song did they choose
to open the second set? “Viola Lee Blues.” They immediately went right to the “I mailed a letter in the air” verse – no
jamming or anything. And within a couple of seconds of finishing that verse, the
music exploded and the band moved into “China Cat Sunflower.” At that point,
the janitor showed up with some thicker paper towels. At first, he wanted to
give us only one, clearly not fully cognizant of the problem. I had to keep
asking for more. He handed them to us one at a time. I kept saying, “Give us
the whole stack, we are standing in a pond.” But the stingy bastard was
incredibly reluctant to part with them. Were they his personal towels? Had he
brought them from home? What’s the story
there? And, you know, could this spill possibly be the result of them taking the
goddamn caps off of the water bottles? He handed us four or five towels, and
then walked away. We spread those few towels out the best we could and then
focused our attention back where it belonged – the music. Because things were
starting to cook now. The “China Cat” jam was a highlight of the show, taking
off and pushing through, and eventually leading to “I Know You Rider.” This
entire section was fantastic, and my wet shoes were dancing. That led to “Dark
Star,” with a nice long jam before any vocals, as if the band were playing the song all the
way through first as an instrumental to see how it would go. Well, it went
extremely well, and the floor was in purple and green, my two favorite colors. The
band tamed the beast, and now was making it do a few tricks, and once they had
it there at their feet, they went into the first verse, the ceiling twinkling
above. The jam after the first verse went in another direction, thumping and
driving and pushing us through some barrier, or at least right up against it.
Do we burst through this wall, or just melt into it? Or climb it? Or create a
door? What’s behind the vibrating door? Giggling spiders and inquisitive
electric rhinos. But we all found our way back, in time for Bob to sing the
second verse. He held onto that “Lady in velvet,” stretching her out to
incredible proportions.
Where to next? Ah, “He’s Gone.” “Nothing left to do but smile, smile, smile,” and the sun beamed at us
from above the stage, covering us in glorious yellow. That jam eased us into “Drums,”
to a land half electronic, half organic. The drummers faced away from us, as if
playing to the creatures of light dancing above at the back of the stage, like
leading us in a ceremony. But it was not long before Mickey coaxed a new dawn,
a new world from the ether, drawing the others back out for “Space.” They
picked notes from the lights to help us through the forest.
And then? “Althea.” It was an
odd choice to lead us out of “Space,” but there we were, and a damn good jam
came from it, with some delicious work by Jeff on keys. It ended up being a really good “Althea.” Then suddenly, boom, we were into “Morning Dew,” which began
with an explosion, the end of the world, you understand. Who knew there’d be this
great beauty after the end? “Morning Dew” took us to some glorious heights,
resplendent and pulsing. For a moment, I thought the set would end there, but
Bob led the band into “One More Saturday Night.” That’s right, Bob, it’s Saturday
night. I’ve never been excited to hear this one, but last night it featured some good
stuff from Jeff, and of course there was a nice spark there toward the end.
There was actually a false ending to the song, and the band kept it going.
Unnecessary, but kind of fun. The second set ended at 11 p.m. And at 11:01
p.m., they were back on stage for the encore, “The Weight.” Both Oteil and Jeff
received a whole lot of love from the crowd when they started their verses.
Then, interestingly, the song went into a really cool vocal jam at the end,
which was wonderful. The band took bows at the edge of the stage, and that was
the night. The show ended at 11:11 p.m.
Set List
Set I
- Viola Lee Blues >
- Bertha >
- Viola Lee Blues
- Jack Straw
- Big Boss Man
- Friend Of The Devil
- West L.A. Fadeaway
- Lost Sailor >
- Saint Of Circumstance
- Viola Lee Blues >
- China Cat Sunflower >
- I Know You Rider >
- Dark Star >
- He’s Gone >
- Drums >
- Space >
- Althea >
- Morning Dew
- One More Saturday Night
- The Weight
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