Weir Here
Yet the train keeps rolling, borne of its own momentum, the adoration for the songs of the Grateful Dead, the adoration for the members of the Grateful Dead, the sense of community that will not die, adding new members even as the old ones fade away.

Home
  • Leftover Salmon is breaking up or taking a break?
    Leftover Salmon after 15 yrs says no more.. a hiatus or good-bye for good? read more..

  •  
  • Leftover Salmon is breaking up or taking a break?
    Leftover Salmon after 15 yrs says no more.. a hiatus or good-bye for good? read more..

  •  
  • Mark Karan interview - 4/21/01
    Mark Karan interview

  •  
  • Railroad Earth
    With nearly 400 shows and tens of thousands of road miles now behind them, Railroad Earth has become a staple on the national touring and festival scene, and built a huge following of loyal fans that document and trade every note they play, and often join them on the road for multiple nights. These fans call themselves “Hobos,” and the band considers them to be the fuel that keeps this engine chugging along. Railroad Earth’s next album is planned for release in Spring 2004. Till then the band will continue to bring their music to the stage from East to West. So keep an ear to the ground and listen for Railroad Earth, because they'll be rolling through your town very soon.

  •  
  • ten2nine
    "I hate to break the news to you, but you guy's may have finally put all the pieces together. This new ep is the best work I've heard from you ever! The writing, lyrics and music is superb, the performance is top notch and [Jim Leguilloux's] production gives it a true professional gloss." - Ron Gilmour, Power 104 Kelowna, BC

  •  
  • Metharia
    The debut on the band was on 18th January 2000, when Metharia won the festival "Le Quattro Notti Rock." In June 2003 they are one of the three winners of the "NMC festival,' in Marcerta winning the award for the best live performance.

  •  
  • Signal Path
    Armed with new jungle juice, they are warming up and ready to play. They opened up with a latenight show in Atlanta and continued on to Mountain View Jam Festival in North Carolina. Coast to coast, they'll be working their way to SummerCamp, Wakarusa, and High Sierra Music Festival.

  •  
  • T-Band
    Jim Dooney plays guitar and does most of the lead vocals. He is great at getting everyone involved in the fun by taking requests or choosing the perfect song for any situation. Amy Anderson plays the stand up bass and sings harmony. Amy is the musical backbone of the band. Her playing punch and solid timing keeps us all together in our all acoustic environment. Robert Griffith plays banjo and sings harmony. Rob drives the band with lightning fast fingers and great improvising skills. Rich Egan plays mandolin and does some vocals. Rich keeps your feet tapping and your fingers snapping with his rhythm chops and is great at playing tasteful solos."

  •  
  • Shanti Groove (September 2003)
    Shanti's groove moves along acoustical and electrical lines, combining the voice of jazz and rock with back porch bluegrass and funktified percussion. Bringing their unique sound to venues nationwide, the band provides a musical celebration of the 'groove' kind.

  •  
  • Kelly's running column
    In this column I want to talk to you about Ghent. Ghent is the capital of the province East-Flanders in Belgium, a small country in Europe, and has about 225, 000 inhabitants.

  •  
  • Kelly's running column
    In this column I want to talk to you about Ghent. Ghent is the capital of the province East-Flanders in Belgium, a small country in Europe, and has about 225, 000 inhabitants.

  •  
  • Curious Yellow (August 2003)
    After fronting a couple bands in the mid 90s in California and spending the next several years developing his musical and songwriting talents in Japan and Minneapolis, Adam Lancaster landed in Denver in 2000 and founded the band. The band took on many formations and seemingly endless lineup changes for about a year until the perfect complimentary additions of Gregg Rosenthal (drums), Josh Eckhoff (guitar), and Matt Novack (bass, vocals) created a sound and style beyond what Adam could have hoped for. This new talented group immediately began writing songs and reworking old songs to create music and a performance that attracts and engages every listening audience. The personal and musical bond between each member deepened quickly and the dedication from everyone to develop the band to its fullest possibilities is evident.

  •  
  • New Monsoon (June 2003)
    Utilizing congas, timbales, tabla, banjo, bongos, Dobro, ghatham, Didgeridoo, electric and acoustic guitars, bass, drum kit and keys, the band offers a plethora of textures, rhythms, ideas and moods. New Monsoon absorbs elements of sound indigenous to world culture and incorporates them into a variety of colorful and original rhythmic compositions.

  •  
  • One Way Rider (May 2003)
    "One Way Rider has taken Nashville by storm! It was an honor to have them perform on the Interstate Radio Network a network of over twenty stations that broadcast from Music City and airs nationwide and in Canada. Locally in Nashville, the IRN broadcast on WSM 650 AM, the home of the Grand Ole Opry. The response was great! We cant wait to have them come back on the air and play for us again. It was so good to be with folks that live and love the bluegrass way, truly a blessed family. David and Valerie are a great example of what a family can accomplish together."

  •  
  • Smokestack (January 2003)
    “The quality of playing blew me away. All four guys were stars, but that keyboard player is a superstar. Very Hornsby in his writing and singing, very Medeski with his jams. I have had the CD for a few months, and being a little familiar with the songs impressed me even more.” CanJam News Toronto, Canada

  •  
  • The Miltones (December 2002)
    Formed in the summer of 2000, the Miltones have already performed over 350 shows in under 28 months. Their high volume of gigs has enabled the band to mature and explore a range of musical directions that make them a formidable artistic act. Simultaneously their music seems to embrace a level of healing and celebration that make them both accessible and fortunate for the audiences they have attracted.

  •  
  • Ripple (November 2002)
    When Ripple started out in an Old Tappan, NJ basement during early 1978, none of us thought we would be discussing the possibilities of playing together for 25 years. But that’s exactly what happened. From the early day’s of playing friends parties (usually when the Parent’s were away) to all the great nightclubs and other interesting venues we’ve performed at during the years, we’ve met some amazing people and formed life long friendships that will long out live the Band.

  •  
  • Ray Charles died today at 73.
    Ray Charles dead at 73

  •  
  • Fair To Midland (September 2002)
    Brett Stowers and Nathin Seals offer a rhythmic passion that leads the humble gentlemen in their avant-garde sound. The unearthed discord and unconventional cries of frontman Andrew Sudderth infused with guitarist Cliff Campbell's melodic fury tumble into a captivating creation of sonics, cultures, and confusion. Combined with the subtle offering of Matt Langley on keys, FTM glides past the expected boundries and gracefully throws their intense rock harmonies to the flame.

  •  
  • The Few (July 2002)
    "We did it in chunks, whenever he was available," says Burnside. "Living there, and playing in the clubs, it raises your game." The result, an explosive, hooky collection that echoes Burnside's love of the Replacements and fascination with the Cure, is startling from a 22-year-old who took up guitar only three years ago.

  •  
  • One Cat Left (May 2002)
    Pete’s former association with TOM MARSHALL of PHISH led to the band AMFIBIAN. It was here in this situation that Pete found his voice and his motivation..

  •  
  • Mt. Kilimanjaro!
    In one scene we saw a hippo in the river, a croccodile laying on the bank just beside it, and a waterbuck stanking near in the grass!

  •  
  • Grateful Web Interview with Madison House and SCI Ticketing
    SCI interview

  •  
  • Leftover will be calling it quits at years end.
    Leftover Salmon are saying goodbye..

  •  
  • AN ANNOUNCEMENT FROM TREY 05.25.04
    Phish is coming to end..

  •  
  • Sativa Gumbo (April 2002)
    Sativa Gumbo

  •  
  • Pamela's stories from Africa
    This month I'll continue teaching English at the school, organize a second beekeeping seminar, begin making fuel-efficient stoves, and track down another place to buy modern breed roosters.

  •  
  • Yamagata update
    Yamagata

  •  
  • Yamagata (June 2001)
    Yamagata

  •  
  • JSwine (October 2000)
    JSwine

  •  
  • Mark Karan (August 2000)
    Mark Karan

  •  
  • Moses Guest (September 2000)
    Moses Guest

  •  
  • Uncle Sammy (July 2001)
    Uncle Sammy

  •  
  • Solomon Grundy (April 2001)
    Solomon Grundy

  •  
  • Tonal Vision (May 2001)
    Tonal Vision

  •  
  • Local Music Review: Iconocaust
    Iconocaust rocked the House of Rock. Before the end of the first song people were trying to start a pit, had House of Rock advertised the entire house would have been a pit in minutes. This band passed the ultimate test for me, the second I came home I had to pick up my guitar rip out death metal licks. (Tip for the guys: playing death metal at 3 am is not the way to promote a healthy relationship with your girlfriend, especially if she is asleep and has to be to work at 7am)

  •  
  • Oil’s Well that Ends Well
    Reason #4: Olfactory. Maybe I’m weird, but I like driving around in a car whose exhaust smells like French fries.

  •  
  • Oil’s Well that Ends Well
    Reason #4: Olfactory. Maybe I’m weird, but I like driving around in a car whose exhaust smells like French fries.

  •  
  • Oil’s Well that Ends Well
    Reason #4: Olfactory. Maybe I’m weird, but I like driving around in a car whose exhaust smells like French fries.

  •  
  • Dark Star Orchestra Live Webcast 10/14/2005 - Archive Available
    Dark Star Orchestra and The Grateful Web teamed up to provide a streaming video broadcast of DSO's October 14 performance in Eugene, OR. An ARCHIVED STREAM is NOW AVAILABLE ...

  •  
  • Dark Star Orchestra Live Webcast 10/14/2005 - Archive Available
    Dark Star Orchestra and The Grateful Web teamed up to provide a streaming video broadcast of DSO's October 14 performance in Eugene, OR. An ARCHIVED STREAM is NOW AVAILABLE ...

  •  
  • Local Music Review: Obcission
    Imagine Nine Inch Nails without self deprecating & suicidal themes and even more fearlessness to deviate from the standard “formula” of song creation, and your close to what Obcission is.

  •  
  • Local Music Review: Obcission
    Imagine Nine Inch Nails without self deprecating & suicidal themes and even more fearlessness to deviate from the standard “formula” of song creation, and your close to what Obcission is.

  •  
  • Every Now is a New Now for the Steve Kimock Band
    The Steve Kimock Band consistently illustrates one of my favorite observations about existence that "every 'now' is a new 'now'" and will continue to explore that maxim in their New Years Eve Celebration, The New Now Ball.

  •  
  • Every Now is a New Now for the Steve Kimock Band
    The Steve Kimock Band consistently illustrates one of my favorite observations about existence that "every 'now' is a new 'now'" and will continue to explore that maxim in their New Years Eve Celebration, The New Now Ball.

  •  
  • Halloween in Vegoose
    Set Two is christened with a ripping Slackjaw Jezebel but the true eye opener is John Lennon's "I'm So Tired." After a drum segment conjuring up "When The Levee Breaks" and then an insanely percolating jam, George Porter of the Meters, along with D.J. Logic, joins the Mule for a wicked "Spanish Moon."

  •  
  • Honesty Files: Enlisting
    I am not trying to discourage anyone from joining the military. I hope that those who read this will be better equipped when they do face the recruiter. Its no secret that the military is desperate for folks to join right now. If this is your calling, please pursue it, but be mindful of what you are promised. I hope that one day the military will relax their standards so people in my situation can join of free conscious.

  •  
  • Honesty Files: Enlisting
    I am not trying to discourage anyone from joining the military. I hope that those who read this will be better equipped when they do face the recruiter. Its no secret that the military is desperate for folks to join right now. If this is your calling, please pursue it, but be mindful of what you are promised. I hope that one day the military will relax their standards so people in my situation can join of free conscious.

  •  
  • Honesty Files: Enlisting
    I am not trying to discourage anyone from joining the military. I hope that those who read this will be better equipped when they do face the recruiter. Its no secret that the military is desperate for folks to join right now. If this is your calling, please pursue it, but be mindful of what you are promised. I hope that one day the military will relax their standards so people in my situation can join of free conscious.

  •  
  • Vegaroo
    Off to go see the Flaming Lips! Awesome – multimedia cameras and video and lights and balloons and costumed folks and confetti and sing alongs! Yoshimi Battles Pink Robots! Wow.

  •  
  • Vegaroo
    Off to go see the Flaming Lips! Awesome – multimedia cameras and video and lights and balloons and costumed folks and confetti and sing alongs! Yoshimi Battles Pink Robots! Wow.

  •  
  • The Freiker Program Encourages Kids to Bike to School
    Freiker.org is a diamond in the making. Sites like Freiker are what the internet is all about. We hope to re-visit Freiker in the future and see lots more kids riding their bikes!

  •  
  • The Freiker Program Encourages Kids to Bike to School
    Freiker.org is a diamond in the making. Sites like Freiker are what the internet is all about. We hope to re-visit Freiker in the future and see lots more kids riding their bikes!

  •  
  • Kiesendahl + Calhoun Contemporary Art Explores RELATIONS
    Four artists: paintings and drawings by mother and daughter Eva Van Rijn and Maia Chavez with visions from the Grand Canyon and the SouthWest. Potter and painter, mother and daughter-in-law Harriet Ross and Rita Jackevicius Ross will be showing sculptural pottery and local landscapes.

  •  
  • Kiesendahl + Calhoun Contemporary Art Explores RELATIONS
    Four artists: paintings and drawings by mother and daughter Eva Van Rijn and Maia Chavez with visions from the Grand Canyon and the SouthWest. Potter and painter, mother and daughter-in-law Harriet Ross and Rita Jackevicius Ross will be showing sculptural pottery and local landscapes.

  •  
  • Début du Siècle
    The proud French, who decry the cultural and gustatory effects of McDonald's restaurants in France, need to set some priorities. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • Début du Siècle
    The proud French, who decry the cultural and gustatory effects of McDonald's restaurants in France, need to set some priorities. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • Friendly Violent Fun!
    Cryogen, Iconocaust, Havok, Deadless. The few radio stations in Denver with DJ’s who are willing to “occasionally” play some local music tend to be pretentious snobs who only like “their” kind of music and generally wouldn’t know good music even if it took them to bed and sat on their face.

  •  
  • Friendly Violent Fun!
    Cryogen, Iconocaust, Havok, Deadless. The few radio stations in Denver with DJ’s who are willing to “occasionally” play some local music tend to be pretentious snobs who only like “their” kind of music and generally wouldn’t know good music even if it took them to bed and sat on their face.

  •  
  • Tony Furtado at the Boulder Theater..review coming soon!
    Appearing with Tony: local heros Drew Emmitt Band featuring Bill Nershi. Grateful Web's review of the show will be posted soon...

  •  
  • Tony Furtado at the Boulder Theater..review coming soon!
    Appearing with Tony: local heros Drew Emmitt Band featuring Bill Nershi. Grateful Web's review of the show will be posted soon...

  •  
  • WSP Kicks Off Their Four Night Run At The Fillmore
    Panic almost personifies life in a way; its not always so great, things end and others begin but the train keeps rolling and you have to make the best with what you got if it feels good. Well, what can I say? It feels damn good.

  •  
  • WSP Kicks Off Their Four Night Run At The Fillmore
    Panic almost personifies life in a way; its not always so great, things end and others begin but the train keeps rolling and you have to make the best with what you got if it feels good. Well, what can I say? It feels damn good.

  •  
  • Mimi Fishman Auction Raises $7,487 For Charity!
    The auction has ended. Thanks to everyone who participated. $7,487.20 was raised for the Station Family Fund, Delta Gamma Center, and the Mimi Fishman Foundation.

  •  
  • Tony Furtado Band Returns To The Boulder Theater
    The electric banjo work is subtle, yet intricate, and you can feel Furtado’s inspiration in each pluck. His songwriting skills seem acute as ever and Tony’s acoustic guitar diligence showcases his years of creative experience and exploration

  •  
  • Tony Furtado Band Returns To The Boulder Theater
    The electric banjo work is subtle, yet intricate, and you can feel Furtado’s inspiration in each pluck. His songwriting skills seem acute as ever and Tony’s acoustic guitar diligence showcases his years of creative experience and exploration

  •  
  • Hero Citizen Challenges Wasteful Cannabis Citation
    Denver voters did not want this individual cited, yet he was cited anyway in defiance of the will of the voters. This individual is a professional, law-abiding citizen who believed he was acting in a legal manner. A citation would not have been issued if this person had enough alcohol in his possession to kill a busload of people, but because it was a tiny amount of marijuana this city will spend valuable city resources dragging him through the legal process, in another example of our city punishing people for making the rational, safer choice to use marijuana instead of alcohol.

  •  
  • Hero Citizen Challenges Wasteful Cannabis Citation
    Denver voters did not want this individual cited, yet he was cited anyway in defiance of the will of the voters. This individual is a professional, law-abiding citizen who believed he was acting in a legal manner. A citation would not have been issued if this person had enough alcohol in his possession to kill a busload of people, but because it was a tiny amount of marijuana this city will spend valuable city resources dragging him through the legal process, in another example of our city punishing people for making the rational, safer choice to use marijuana instead of alcohol.

  •  
  • I Believe
    On my personal journey I've come to the conclusion that what is most important is to be continually open to whatever lessons life has to offer, to respond thoughtfully and compassionately, and to have an open heart. Everything else seems superfluous. Because much of what I did or did not do in my younger years was either for the reward of Heaven or to avoid the consequence of Hell, my actions were for appearances' sake and little else. I feel that I'm now living and striving to live a more actualized, genuine, spiritual life.

  •  
  • I Believe
    On my personal journey I've come to the conclusion that what is most important is to be continually open to whatever lessons life has to offer, to respond thoughtfully and compassionately, and to have an open heart. Everything else seems superfluous. Because much of what I did or did not do in my younger years was either for the reward of Heaven or to avoid the consequence of Hell, my actions were for appearances' sake and little else. I feel that I'm now living and striving to live a more actualized, genuine, spiritual life.

  •  
  • Trey at the Fillmore
    The second set of the 70 Volt Parade came out firing with the band’s first rendition of Jimi Hendrix’s Cross-town Traffic. This let Anastasio stretch his legs, so to speak, and return his amp to the proper chandelier shaking level. The band really nailed this one – yet another left field cover to catch me off guard.

  •  
  • Trey at the Fillmore
    The second set of the 70 Volt Parade came out firing with the band’s first rendition of Jimi Hendrix’s Cross-town Traffic. This let Anastasio stretch his legs, so to speak, and return his amp to the proper chandelier shaking level. The band really nailed this one – yet another left field cover to catch me off guard.

  •  
  • Evangelical-Phobia and Its Cure
    The divisions of our country boil here on earth and in the spiritual world. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right

  •  
  • Evangelical-Phobia and Its Cure
    The divisions of our country boil here on earth and in the spiritual world. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right

  •  
  • "I Aint Dead Yet Mother F**ker"
    Richard Pryor died Saturday from a heart attack; he was 65. Richard was generous enough to autograph a copy of his book, "Pryor Convictions and Other Life Sentences" for a recent charity auction. Richard really was one of the funniest people ever, and will be missed.

  •  
  • Dr. John plays ETOWN
    Not only is the Good Doctor's dry, gravel cackle one of the most infectious sounds in both jazz and popular music, but he is universally celebrated as the living embodiment of the rich musical heritage exclusive to the Crescent City.

  •  
  • Dr. John plays ETOWN
    Not only is the Good Doctor's dry, gravel cackle one of the most infectious sounds in both jazz and popular music, but he is universally celebrated as the living embodiment of the rich musical heritage exclusive to the Crescent City.

  •  
  • Steve Kimock Band Webcast Archive Available Now!
    The Steve Kimock Band & the Grateful Web teamed up to provide a live streaming video broadcast of SKB's Saturday night performance in Eugene, OR. We now have the video archive file posted! There is also a direct link to photos from the show...Grateful Web's favorite quote from the latest webcast... "listening to SKB live with my 3 month old boy...it is his first show...this is great!!!"

  •  
  • Steve Kimock Band Webcast Archive Available Now!
    The Steve Kimock Band & the Grateful Web teamed up to provide a live streaming video broadcast of SKB's Saturday night performance in Eugene, OR. We now have the video archive file posted! There is also a direct link to photos from the show...Grateful Web's favorite quote from the latest webcast... "listening to SKB live with my 3 month old boy...it is his first show...this is great!!!"

  •  
  • Steve Kimock Band Webcast Archive Available Now!
    The Steve Kimock Band & the Grateful Web teamed up to provide a live streaming video broadcast of SKB's Saturday night performance in Eugene, OR. We now have the video archive file posted! There is also a direct link to photos from the show...Grateful Web's favorite quote from the latest webcast... "listening to SKB live with my 3 month old boy...it is his first show...this is great!!!"

  •  
  • Chanukah Terrorist Attack Thwarted in Israel
    The bomber then opened his coat and detonated the explosives belt concealed under his coat. The belt had been wired to a very large amount of explosives and additionally had nails and other metallic debris attached to it. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right

  •  
  • Chanukah Terrorist Attack Thwarted in Israel
    The bomber then opened his coat and detonated the explosives belt concealed under his coat. The belt had been wired to a very large amount of explosives and additionally had nails and other metallic debris attached to it. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right

  •  
  • Punked Up
    These guys exemplify what punk has been for me. A few friends up on stage playing, having fun and not giving a rat’s ass about anything else! Other than the high drink prices and lack of heat the Soiled Dove could be the best place in town to catch a show! If they could fix those two issues I would give them an A+!

  •  
  • Punked Up
    These guys exemplify what punk has been for me. A few friends up on stage playing, having fun and not giving a rat’s ass about anything else! Other than the high drink prices and lack of heat the Soiled Dove could be the best place in town to catch a show! If they could fix those two issues I would give them an A+!

  •  
  • Not On Mars
    Not On Mars is the culmination of years of evolutionary change, tectonic plate shifts deep within the crust of the Great Divide that has kept Jazz and Rock at relatively safe distances from one another. Not On Mars dares to be among those intrepid explorers that made venture into that Great Wilderness.

  •  
  • Not On Mars
    Not On Mars is the culmination of years of evolutionary change, tectonic plate shifts deep within the crust of the Great Divide that has kept Jazz and Rock at relatively safe distances from one another. Not On Mars dares to be among those intrepid explorers that made venture into that Great Wilderness.

  •  
  • Good Times Bad Times
    In front of your face appears a Led Zeppelin One album cover. At this point the crowd erupts in cheers as the album is placed on side ‘A’ and the needle drops to track one. Lights on stage come up and Rose Hill Drive kicks into Track one of Zeppelin One’s ‘Good Times, Bad Times’.

  •  
  • Good Times Bad Times
    In front of your face appears a Led Zeppelin One album cover. At this point the crowd erupts in cheers as the album is placed on side ‘A’ and the needle drops to track one. Lights on stage come up and Rose Hill Drive kicks into Track one of Zeppelin One’s ‘Good Times, Bad Times’.

  •  
  • Sharon the Lion, Sleeping
    As terrible as the slaughter at Sabra and Shatila was, one must understand it was not the work of Ariel Sharon. Lebanon's civil war produced many such gruesome battles between irregulars seeking vengeance and control of the ravaged country. The PLO, Shiite Amal militia, Syrian forces, Christian Phalangists, and other combatants with obscure affiliations produced over 95,000 deaths. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • Sharon the Lion, Sleeping
    As terrible as the slaughter at Sabra and Shatila was, one must understand it was not the work of Ariel Sharon. Lebanon's civil war produced many such gruesome battles between irregulars seeking vengeance and control of the ravaged country. The PLO, Shiite Amal militia, Syrian forces, Christian Phalangists, and other combatants with obscure affiliations produced over 95,000 deaths. Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • Happy 100th, Albert Hoffman!
    Wednesday, January 11th, was Albert Hoffman's 100th birthday. To help celebrate Dr. Hofmann's life and birthday, a wonderful international symposium is set to be held in Basel, Switzerland, on January 13-15 2006. This symposium will feature some of the most famous scientists, writers, artists, and friends of Dr. Hofmann with presentations and discussion forums. You can find out more and order tickets at the event's website: http://www.lsd.info

  •  
  • CELEBRATION! Arrested Development!
    This multi-gender, multigenerational, multiracial band never sounded better or were more timely in their message of freedom and one-love.

  •  
  • CELEBRATION! Arrested Development!
    This multi-gender, multigenerational, multiracial band never sounded better or were more timely in their message of freedom and one-love.

  •  
  • Ice Cream: I Can't Decide & Keep on Sampling!
    Snuck into Mickey C's Bagel Shop at the Table Mesa Maze plaza in Boulder, CO may be the best darn ice cream in town.

  •  
  • Ice Cream: I Can't Decide & Keep on Sampling!
    Snuck into Mickey C's Bagel Shop at the Table Mesa Maze plaza in Boulder, CO may be the best darn ice cream in town.

  •  
  • Wilson Pickett died Thursday, he was 64
    Wilson Pickett died Thursday at the age of 64. He's best known for some great Motown classics including "Mustang Sally" and "In the Midnight Hour," among others. His music transcended his Motown roots and was covered by musicians of all kinds.

  •  
  • John Souders Name That Band, Series A
    Most everyone is familiar with the songs of these popular and culturally iconic bands. But how well do you know their faces? Take this challenge to test your familiarity with some of the most influential musicians of our time! John Souders.

  •  
  • John Souders Name That Band, Series A
    Most everyone is familiar with the songs of these popular and culturally iconic bands. But how well do you know their faces? Take this challenge to test your familiarity with some of the most influential musicians of our time! John Souders.

  •  
  • Becoming What You Abhor: The Lesson Learned from "The Family"
    While it is easy for most of us to empathize with their concern for the environment and animals, and their discouragement and outrage at how little the masses of society care about these concerns, it is harder to understand what they thought they were accomplishing with their violent attacks.

  •  
  • Becoming What You Abhor: The Lesson Learned from "The Family"
    While it is easy for most of us to empathize with their concern for the environment and animals, and their discouragement and outrage at how little the masses of society care about these concerns, it is harder to understand what they thought they were accomplishing with their violent attacks.

  •  
  • Becoming What You Abhor: The Lesson Learned from "The Family"
    While it is easy for most of us to empathize with their concern for the environment and animals, and their discouragement and outrage at how little the masses of society care about these concerns, it is harder to understand what they thought they were accomplishing with their violent attacks.

  •  
  • Democracy in Action...Yikes
    Taliban Destroyed, Saddam Deposed, Hamas Delighted...Uh Oh... Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • Democracy in Action...Yikes
    Taliban Destroyed, Saddam Deposed, Hamas Delighted...Uh Oh... Donald Meissner's Grateful Right.

  •  
  • SPIRIT IS EVERYTHING IN ZAMBILAND!
    With Herring and Burbridge passing intense exchanges back and forth across the stage, Bobby Lee showed no problem filling the spot Matt Mundy used to man. Rogers’ extensive picking on ‘Salty Dog’ left most of us saying “Matt who?” by the end of the evening.

  •  
  • SPIRIT IS EVERYTHING IN ZAMBILAND!
    With Herring and Burbridge passing intense exchanges back and forth across the stage, Bobby Lee showed no problem filling the spot Matt Mundy used to man. Rogers’ extensive picking on ‘Salty Dog’ left most of us saying “Matt who?” by the end of the evening.

  •  
  • Tiësto named Mixmag's #1 DJ in 2008
    Tiësto is excited about topping off this fantastic year with this acknowledgement and says, "I am honored that Mixmag chose me as the number one DJ of 2008. I had an amazing year and would like to thank Mixmag and their readers for their support!"

  •  
  • Mike Berkowitz & the Gene Krupa Band at Iridium for Gene's 100th Birthday
    Star drummer Gene Krupa and his Orchestra were the hottest of the hot stuff in the big band years. Fortunately Mike Berkowitz, an incredible drummer of today rescued the brilliant Krupa arrangements and put together a phenomenal aggregation of some of our New York Jazz world's swingingest musicians and Vocalist extraordinaire, Cassie Miller from L.A. Not just for nostalgia buffs and music historians, any real jazz lover has to be thrilled by the sounds made by this amazing 16-piece group. Scott Barbarino has booked them into the Iridium, the premiere Jazz room (on West 51 Street and Broadway) on Tuesday, January 13, which coincides with what would have been Gene Krupa's 100th birthday.

  •  
  • Mike Berkowitz & the Gene Krupa Band at Iridium for Gene's 100th Birthday
    Star drummer Gene Krupa and his Orchestra were the hottest of the hot stuff in the big band years. Fortunately Mike Berkowitz, an incredible drummer of today rescued the brilliant Krupa arrangements and put together a phenomenal aggregation of some of our New York Jazz world's swingingest musicians and Vocalist extraordinaire, Cassie Miller from L.A. Not just for nostalgia buffs and music historians, any real jazz lover has to be thrilled by the sounds made by this amazing 16-piece group. Scott Barbarino has booked them into the Iridium, the premiere Jazz room (on West 51 Street and Broadway) on Tuesday, January 13, which coincides with what would have been Gene Krupa's 100th birthday.

  •  
  • New Years Eve Party, Ky-mani Marley, TOK, Turblence, & Pressure
    New Years Eve Party at 2b1 Multimedia Inc. 3075 17th Street, San Francisco, featuring: Ky-mani Marley, TOK, Turbulence, Pressure and Winstrong.

  •  
  • New Years Eve Party, Ky-mani Marley, TOK, Turblence, & Pressure
    New Years Eve Party at 2b1 Multimedia Inc. 3075 17th Street, San Francisco, featuring: Ky-mani Marley, TOK, Turbulence, Pressure and Winstrong.

  •  
  • WU Years Eve Bash
    If you're looking for something to do New Year's Eve this year and you're in the neighborhood of Minneapolis, fall by The Boardroom at Trocaderos on Wednesday night for a four-band groove extravaganza on two stages, hosted by local music partiers The Big Wu.

  •  
  • WU Years Eve Bash
    If you're looking for something to do New Year's Eve this year and you're in the neighborhood of Minneapolis, fall by The Boardroom at Trocaderos on Wednesday night for a four-band groove extravaganza on two stages, hosted by local music partiers The Big Wu.

  •  
  • Toubab Krewe NYE in Denver + Winter Tour!
    Toubab Krewe is thrilled to be in Denver for NYE tonight at Cervantes' Masterpiece Ballroom. Special guest Rayna Gellert (Uncle Earl) joins the band for the run on fiddle.

  •  
  • Toubab Krewe NYE in Denver + Winter Tour!
    Toubab Krewe is thrilled to be in Denver for NYE tonight at Cervantes' Masterpiece Ballroom. Special guest Rayna Gellert (Uncle Earl) joins the band for the run on fiddle.

  •  
  • The Dead to Tour in 2009...
    The lineup for this edition of The Dead will be the same one that rocked the house at Penn State last fall at the Obama benefit: The Core Four of Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by guitar monster Warren Haynes and RatDog keyboard ace Jeff Chimenti (both veterans of the 2004 Dead "Wave That Flag" tour).

  •  
  • The Dead to Tour in 2009...
    The lineup for this edition of The Dead will be the same one that rocked the house at Penn State last fall at the Obama benefit: The Core Four of Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined by guitar monster Warren Haynes and RatDog keyboard ace Jeff Chimenti (both veterans of the 2004 Dead "Wave That Flag" tour).

  •  
  • Jesse Elder Quintet live at the Blue Note Tonight
    Jesse is a NYC based jazz composer, pianist and band leader. He has performed at venues such as the Blue Note, Smalls, Minton's Playhouse, Fat Cat, Top of the Rock, the Jazz Standard, and Town Hall. Jesse graduated from Interlochen Arts Academy where he received a "Fine Arts Award in Jazz Performance" and went on to study on scholarship at Oberlin Conservatory and New School University for Jazz and Contemporary Music. Jesse performs his original compositions with renowned jazz artists such as Nasheet Waits, Ben Street, Chris Cheek, Tyshawn Sorey, Logan Richardson, Gary Thomas and others.

  •  
  • Jesse Elder Quintet live at the Blue Note Tonight
    Jesse is a NYC based jazz composer, pianist and band leader. He has performed at venues such as the Blue Note, Smalls, Minton's Playhouse, Fat Cat, Top of the Rock, the Jazz Standard, and Town Hall. Jesse graduated from Interlochen Arts Academy where he received a "Fine Arts Award in Jazz Performance" and went on to study on scholarship at Oberlin Conservatory and New School University for Jazz and Contemporary Music. Jesse performs his original compositions with renowned jazz artists such as Nasheet Waits, Ben Street, Chris Cheek, Tyshawn Sorey, Logan Richardson, Gary Thomas and others.

  •  
  • Turbine Rumbles in the Red Fish
    Rightmire’s harmonica is almost certainly the band’s most exciting feature. It functions like a mouth-operated synthesizer, electrified, and run through a huge board of pedals. At times it sounds like a DJ scratch kit, at others it sounds like something from outer space. Sometimes it sounds like a regular harmonica. Rightmire’s epic lung capacity allows him to jam out on the mouth harp with incredible longevity. Long after most people would have blacked out and fallen over, Rightmire keeps the notes flowing, rocking around like a man possessed. I felt lightheaded just watching.

  •  
  • Turbine Rumbles in the Red Fish
    Rightmire’s harmonica is almost certainly the band’s most exciting feature. It functions like a mouth-operated synthesizer, electrified, and run through a huge board of pedals. At times it sounds like a DJ scratch kit, at others it sounds like something from outer space. Sometimes it sounds like a regular harmonica. Rightmire’s epic lung capacity allows him to jam out on the mouth harp with incredible longevity. Long after most people would have blacked out and fallen over, Rightmire keeps the notes flowing, rocking around like a man possessed. I felt lightheaded just watching.

  •  
  • Attention Colorado: Umphrey’s is on the Way!
    Chicago’s favorite export is coming to Colorado, and I’m not talking about either crooked politicians or Da Bears. I’m talking about Umphrey’s McGee, who will be doing a four-night stint along the Front Range later this month, beginning at the Aggie in Fort Collins on the 22nd. From there, UM will be stopping at the Boulder Theater on the 23rd, with back to back gigs in Denver at the Fillmore and Cervantes on the 24th, and a show in Breckenridge on the 25th.

  •  
  • Attention Colorado: Umphrey’s is on the Way!
    Chicago’s favorite export is coming to Colorado, and I’m not talking about either crooked politicians or Da Bears. I’m talking about Umphrey’s McGee, who will be doing a four-night stint along the Front Range later this month, beginning at the Aggie in Fort Collins on the 22nd. From there, UM will be stopping at the Boulder Theater on the 23rd, with back to back gigs in Denver at the Fillmore and Cervantes on the 24th, and a show in Breckenridge on the 25th.

  •  
  • New Years Eve: Zeppelin Reborn as Rose Hill Drive
    The promise of hearing Zeppelin II was a deal-maker as well, the kind of rock and roll Rose Hill Drive does best. But when the band opened up with Trans Am, an original track off the band’s latest, Moon is the New Earth, the crowd didn’t know what to think. As it would turn out, the change up was so that the band wouldn’t have to pause in the middle of Zeppelin II to play Auld Lang Syne, release the balloons, and watch the happy couples make out on the dance floor. Good thing too, because once these guys got going, there was no stopping them.

  •  
  • New Years Eve: Zeppelin Reborn as Rose Hill Drive
    The promise of hearing Zeppelin II was a deal-maker as well, the kind of rock and roll Rose Hill Drive does best. But when the band opened up with Trans Am, an original track off the band’s latest, Moon is the New Earth, the crowd didn’t know what to think. As it would turn out, the change up was so that the band wouldn’t have to pause in the middle of Zeppelin II to play Auld Lang Syne, release the balloons, and watch the happy couples make out on the dance floor. Good thing too, because once these guys got going, there was no stopping them.

  •  
  • Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Announce New Lineup & Jan./Feb. Tour Dates
    Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey are very pleased to announce a revamped lineup for 2009. The odyssey continues with Brian Haas on keys, Josh Raymer on drums, and proudly introducing new members Chris Combs on guitar and lap steel and Matt Hayes on bass. The reconfigured band made its debut on New Year's Eve to an elated sold out crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They'll make their next apperance this coming Saturday, January 10th in New York City as part of the 2009 Winter Jazzfest.

  •  
  • Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Announce New Lineup & Jan./Feb. Tour Dates
    Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey are very pleased to announce a revamped lineup for 2009. The odyssey continues with Brian Haas on keys, Josh Raymer on drums, and proudly introducing new members Chris Combs on guitar and lap steel and Matt Hayes on bass. The reconfigured band made its debut on New Year's Eve to an elated sold out crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They'll make their next apperance this coming Saturday, January 10th in New York City as part of the 2009 Winter Jazzfest.

  •  
  • Jones Street Station Announce January Tour
    Jones Street Station make American music that is both contemporary and classic in character. Veterans of New York City's roots music community, they released their debut album Overcome (as The Jones Street Boys) on Smith Street Records in October 2007. They are currently finishing their second album to be released in mid-2009.

  •  
  • Jones Street Station Announce January Tour
    Jones Street Station make American music that is both contemporary and classic in character. Veterans of New York City's roots music community, they released their debut album Overcome (as The Jones Street Boys) on Smith Street Records in October 2007. They are currently finishing their second album to be released in mid-2009.

  •  
  • Switzerland Meets New York @ The Canal Room - 1.14.09
    Beat Kaestli moved to New York from his native Switzerland, where he was awarded a scholarship to the Manhattan School of Music and he received his Master Degree from the Aaron Copland School of Music. While honing his craft alongside luminaries such as Jane Monheit, Jason Moran and Stefon Harris, he immersed himself in Manhattan’s fiercely competitive music scene, and now appears in clubs such as The Blue Note, Birdland, The Bitter End, The Jazz Standard, The Stone and Sweet Rhythm, performing with jazz greats, like Esperanza Spalding, Clarence Penn, Joel Frahm and Victor Prieto.

  •  
  • Switzerland Meets New York @ The Canal Room - 1.14.09
    Beat Kaestli moved to New York from his native Switzerland, where he was awarded a scholarship to the Manhattan School of Music and he received his Master Degree from the Aaron Copland School of Music. While honing his craft alongside luminaries such as Jane Monheit, Jason Moran and Stefon Harris, he immersed himself in Manhattan’s fiercely competitive music scene, and now appears in clubs such as The Blue Note, Birdland, The Bitter End, The Jazz Standard, The Stone and Sweet Rhythm, performing with jazz greats, like Esperanza Spalding, Clarence Penn, Joel Frahm and Victor Prieto.

  •  
  • Harlem Shakes To Release Debut LP 'Technicolor Health'
    After extensive touring and a bit of schooling, the band got back together with Chris Zane (Les Savy Fav, The Walkmen, Passion Pit, White Rabbits) to record their first full-length album, Technicolor Health. The result is one of the most quietly ambitious pop albums in ages. Much like Blur fused English pop traditions and contemporary sonics to forge Brit Pop, Harlem Shakes meld the Great American Songbook with unmistakably contemporary textures, creating what one might call "Am Pop." Influences as disparate as the Band, Randy Newman, Carlos Santana and Spank Rock inform the soundscapes, but the vibe is too coherent to be called eclectic.

  •  
  • Harlem Shakes To Release Debut LP 'Technicolor Health'
    After extensive touring and a bit of schooling, the band got back together with Chris Zane (Les Savy Fav, The Walkmen, Passion Pit, White Rabbits) to record their first full-length album, Technicolor Health. The result is one of the most quietly ambitious pop albums in ages. Much like Blur fused English pop traditions and contemporary sonics to forge Brit Pop, Harlem Shakes meld the Great American Songbook with unmistakably contemporary textures, creating what one might call "Am Pop." Influences as disparate as the Band, Randy Newman, Carlos Santana and Spank Rock inform the soundscapes, but the vibe is too coherent to be called eclectic.

  •  
  • Marco Benevento Announces West Coast Tour Dates
    The Los Angeles Times recently selected Marco Benevento as a "2009 Artist To Watch" in anticipation of Me Not Me. The ten track collection finds Benevento interpreting the work of artists such as Deerhoof, Leonard Cohen, George Harrison and My Morning Jacket among others. Benevento also contributes three original compositions, including "Now They're Writing Music," which was first performed as a rough sketch last spring when the Brooklyn-based pianist appeared on "The World Cafe With David Dye." In addition to Benevento, the album features the aforementioned Mathis and Barr along with drummer Matt Chamberlain. The set was recorded in Seattle at Chroma Sound and mixed in Brooklyn by Bryce Goggin.

  •  
  • Marco Benevento Announces West Coast Tour Dates
    The Los Angeles Times recently selected Marco Benevento as a "2009 Artist To Watch" in anticipation of Me Not Me. The ten track collection finds Benevento interpreting the work of artists such as Deerhoof, Leonard Cohen, George Harrison and My Morning Jacket among others. Benevento also contributes three original compositions, including "Now They're Writing Music," which was first performed as a rough sketch last spring when the Brooklyn-based pianist appeared on "The World Cafe With David Dye." In addition to Benevento, the album features the aforementioned Mathis and Barr along with drummer Matt Chamberlain. The set was recorded in Seattle at Chroma Sound and mixed in Brooklyn by Bryce Goggin.

  •  
  • ULTRA MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES LINE-UP ADDITIONS
    The ULTRA MUSIC FESTIVAL (UMF)--the world’s leading two-day electronic and alternative music experience set for Friday March 27 and Saturday March 28, 2009 during the Winter Music Conference in Miami--has announced more exciting additions to its lineup. Promoters for the festival have revealed that The Prodigy (who will release their new album Invaders Must Die on March 2) and Pendulum, two of the most anticipated live acts for 2009, have been confirmed along with DJ titans Paul Van Dyk and Armin Van Buuren. Moby has also tapped UMF for his exclusive Winter Music Conference appearance.

  •  
  • ULTRA MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES LINE-UP ADDITIONS
    The ULTRA MUSIC FESTIVAL (UMF)--the world’s leading two-day electronic and alternative music experience set for Friday March 27 and Saturday March 28, 2009 during the Winter Music Conference in Miami--has announced more exciting additions to its lineup. Promoters for the festival have revealed that The Prodigy (who will release their new album Invaders Must Die on March 2) and Pendulum, two of the most anticipated live acts for 2009, have been confirmed along with DJ titans Paul Van Dyk and Armin Van Buuren. Moby has also tapped UMF for his exclusive Winter Music Conference appearance.

  •  
  • Hot Buttered Rum & The Travelin' McCourys @ Boulder Theater
    Hot Buttered Rum, one of the hardest-working and fastest-rising stars in the musical firmament, has become, over the last five years, a group that is infinitely greater than the sum of its parts. Often described as a rock band playing bluegrass instruments, the band melds blues, folks, bluegrass, jazz, and rock, and the members’ varying degrees of classical training lead them to invest heavily in group composition. The widespread appeal of HBR’s music stems not only from the band’s musical versatility and prolific songwriting, but also from the magnetic chemistry the group creates onstage together. It is this chemistry that is propelling the band to ever greater success.

  •  
  • Hot Buttered Rum & The Travelin' McCourys @ Boulder Theater
    Hot Buttered Rum, one of the hardest-working and fastest-rising stars in the musical firmament, has become, over the last five years, a group that is infinitely greater than the sum of its parts. Often described as a rock band playing bluegrass instruments, the band melds blues, folks, bluegrass, jazz, and rock, and the members’ varying degrees of classical training lead them to invest heavily in group composition. The widespread appeal of HBR’s music stems not only from the band’s musical versatility and prolific songwriting, but also from the magnetic chemistry the group creates onstage together. It is this chemistry that is propelling the band to ever greater success.

  •  
  • Phish Summer Tour 2009
    Phish will perform ten concerts this coming June. The shows kick off with a two night stand at Jones Beach in Wantagh, NY June 4-5 and wrap up at Alpine Valley in East Troy, WI on June 20-21. Stops along the way include a return to the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis on June 16 and the band's first show at the Asheville Civic Center in Asheville, NC on June 9

  •  
  • Phish Summer Tour 2009
    Phish will perform ten concerts this coming June. The shows kick off with a two night stand at Jones Beach in Wantagh, NY June 4-5 and wrap up at Alpine Valley in East Troy, WI on June 20-21. Stops along the way include a return to the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis on June 16 and the band's first show at the Asheville Civic Center in Asheville, NC on June 9

  •  

The year is 2005. Bob Weir and Ratdog are playing the Fillmore Auditorium in Denver, Colorado.  I was born in 1969.  The Grateful Dead were four years old and gathering steam for their unexpected journey through time that would bring them 40 years into the future. They would become separate bands with separate energies, separate missions.  Yet the train keeps rolling, borne of its own momentum, the adoration for the songs of the Grateful Dead, the adoration for the members of the Grateful Dead, the sense of community that will not die, adding new members even as the old ones fade away.  The music, always the bedrock of the Grateful Dead, keeps broadcasting into the future, even as it grows and changes, a signal in the noise emanating from 1965, 1967, 1976, a history lesson of American culture from the increasingly tumultuous decades of our current era.

 

The Fillmore Auditorium in Denver is now the only other Fillmore theater.  In its original incarnation as the Mammoth Events Center, it hosted shows in the sixties that many say changed the character of the Colfax Avenue neighborhood into the seedy strip it is today.  Extending 26 miles from the foothills to the plains, Colfax Avenue is one of the longest streets in the country, with the Fillmore nestled almost at the center, near the state capitol.  With a mix of adult bookstores, dives, low rent motels and street corner hustlers scattered among the still renewing community, Colfax is the perfect real world evocation of Shakedown Street, which was first performed by the Grateful Dead on August 31, 1978 very close to the western end of Colfax Avenue, at Red Rocks Amphitheatre, and unsurprisingly opened Ratdog's first ever appearance, Friday night at the venue.

 

As the crowd jumps to the familiar tune, now having opened 4 of the 15 shows performed at the Fillmore by either Phil Lesh or Bob Weir, Weir is onstage with Ratdog and the band's most stable lineup since its inception - guitarist Mark Karan, bassist Robin Sylvester, keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, drummer Jay Lane and saxophonist Kenny Brooks - dressed in shorts and sandals despite the December chill, beard neatly trimmed, sporting a pair of distinguished looking specs, leaning into the microphone with that unmistakable pose and singing with that unmistakable voice that hasn't changed a bit since 1965.  With all that has happened over the last 40 years and all the critical and uncritical dissection of the Grateful Dead, it is most frequently Weir's crystal-clear voice that gets ignored.  While he is unmistakably a talented guitarist and musician, Weir's voice remains to this day his best and most evocative instrument.  After following Shakedown with a skillful but perfunctory performance of Minglewood, that leaves me thinking a little bit of the old Saturday Night Live band, Weir leaps into one of his most soulful covers, Dylan's She Belongs to Me, and is clearly in good form as one of the world's best Dylan interpreters.

 

The year is 2005.  The rules are changing.  The Grateful Dead blossomed into a full-blown world-wide phenomenon as a dedicated army of amateur producers began distributing recordings that they had made of the Grateful Dead's concerts, with the bands blessing, many even plugging directly into soundboard.  The cassettes changed hands via networks of fans connected by newsletter, by word of mouth.  Blanks were sent in bulk to complete strangers, who would take time to duplicate over and over and over again shows requested by complete strangers, only for reason of their love of the band and the community and their willingness to participate, to keep the fire burning.  The band grew up, the band's support staff grew up.  Marriage, kids, responsibility, family, illness, life and death.  When Jerry passed on, the great engine that powered the train was no more - the singularity of the Dead Show.  All that was left behind of these shows began to increase in preciousness. Beginning almost simultaneously, the growth of the internet completely changed the accessibility to the music being traded.

 

Chuck Morris, the well-known local music promoter, whose organization is now part of Clear Channel, is onstage introducing the band's long awaited first Fillmore appearance and announcing that CDs of the show will be available immediately after the concert.  There is a still a group of tapers gathered by the soundboard producing the audience tapes that many fans still prefer over the perfection of the digital soundboard recording, but modern technology and economics have created the market for the instant digital replay.  To the band whose job and passion is to create music night after night, a different performance each time, some better than others, the facts of this modern age must be both amazing and disturbing.  While the Grateful Dead invented the feedback loop between the audience and the band, now fans will yell and scream their names into the performance with the hope of being embedded in the recording for posterity, and not for any particular kind of emotional involvement other than bragging rights.  Still, the market exists, is fulfilled and mouths are fed.

 

After the Dylan cover, Weir steps into another Garcia classic, Row Jimmy.  In the highly opinionated Grateful Dead universe, some consider it sacrilegious for Weir to play Garcia tunes.  For some songs I tend to agree.  Row Jimmy is not one.  Never my favorite Dead tune, Ratdog performs it as well as any band and I sense an energy, a seriousness of performance from Weir that I haven't seen for a while.  The rest of the first set is fairly bluesy.  Boots plays harmonica on Walking Blues and Boss Man, The band plays one of their own, Lucky Enough, and knocks out a Big Railroad Blues to close it down.

 

The year is 2005.  No one is certain about anything anymore.  An entire generation does not recognize life without the Internet.  Everything in life can be had online.  Many kids today may never buy a CD in a record store.  Perfect copies of any form of entertainment may be easily made available to friends and strangers.  And a perfect copy is always perfect no matter how many generations from the original have passed. As Bob's lyricist and old friend John Perry Barlow has argued, with the advent of the Internet not only is the genie out of the bottle, but the bottle has now ceased to exist.  Those dedicated tapers and tape traders now have the perfect distribution medium.  No more long sessions laboriously creating and mailing cassettes to complete strangers.  SASE is a dead "word", almost absent from the lexicon.  I can find just about any show I want in a myriad of versions, both audience and soundboard, from numerous web sites and sharing mediums, most of which are administered by people with highly ethical ideals about the distribution of the Grateful Dead's music, always following the guidelines set forth by the band and refusing to share any material that overlaps with an official release.  Because of the ease of distribution, I have not added any new Dead shows to my collection in a few years because all of my hard drives are full and I have been lax about archiving to CD.

 

There are no more Dead shows.  All that is left are the countless copies of lovingly created archives, analog and digital, soundboard and microphone, released and unreleased.  To this date, the Grateful Dead have distributed more than 50 official releases of complete or partial shows from their archives.  Every time one of these shows is released, most operators of sharing networks or sites will remove from distribution soundboard versions of these shows, in deference to the wishes of the band.  There are no more Dead shows.  The fans have always owned the live music, which as an unintentional consequence created an entirely new marketing paradigm, which thousands of organizations both entertainment and otherwise have attempted to emulate.  Now as the band tries to enforce some order on the digital chaos, they have come under fire for shifting the paradigm, for trying to somehow contain the last resources they have left.  Old feuds are rekindled, compromises are reached.  Old pal Barlow advises old pal Weir of the futility of the whole thing.  Fans are not amused.  The status quo is maintained, barely.  There are no more Dead shows.  All that remains are the copies - and the continuing performances of the surviving members.

 

Bob Weir was born to sing El Paso.  Where Marty Robbins wrote and performed it with the ultimate singing cowboy smoothness, Bobby delivers it with his Saturday night tequila confidence that permanently replaces any other rendition, even for the casual listener.  The band takes the stage to play the song to open the second set with their acoustics out but switch to electric as they perform Masters of War and Corrina segueing into West LA Fadeaway.  West LA is another Jerry tune that Weir performs exceptionally well, a slight hint of reggae in his guitar, his singing sinister and sensuous at the same time. Next up is the mashup of Silvio, Tequila and Iko first unveiled on April Fools Day in Chicago, which is both clever and silly at the same time, with the members of the band following up with a series of solos before moving toward the conclusion of the set, beginning with Sugaree.  Bob Weir singing Sugaree is not right, shouldn't happen.  Too much of a signature Garcia tune.  However, Ratdog's version is strong, especially toward the finale, where an extra bit of jam from the band gets the crowd rocking right into an outstanding St. Stephen/Eleven closer.  The Ripple encore is merely standard but the band and audience seem fulfilled as Ratdog takes its bows at the conclusion of their first Fillmore appearance.

 

The year is 2005.  There are no more Dead shows.  Bobby is still out there carrying on with Ratdog playing Grateful Dead songs, some Ratdog songs and a generous mix of covers.  The fans still come out to see him and he is, after all these years, still the rock star of the band.  When he approaches the microphone with that half-step forward, leans in and starts singing with that distinctive voice, a small part of the Grateful Dead remains.

 

Tony Casson,

 

The Grateful Web

 

**************************************************************************

 

Here's some pictures from the show.

 

Other articles by Tony Casson:

 

Phishy, Phishy, Phishy. How do you get your Phix?

 

Don't Panic

 

The Tao of Dark Star

This article has been moved here