A vibrant memory of my summers spent deep in the hills of New
Hampshire between the years of 1984-1994 was watching my counselors and
eventually my friends listen and trade Grateful Dead tapes. I did not
know much about the band at the time, but knew that I liked the rhythm of songs
like “Franklin’s Tower” and the guitar soloing of “Going Down the Road and
Feeling Bad”, but that I could also duck out of the cabin as soon as I heard
“Drums -> Space” start. My friends would go on to structure days off around tour-dates
and eventually I would understand the thrill of seeing live music (thank you
Barry & Jason Feldman for the magical afternoon/evening at Waterloo Village
in Stanhope, NJ). Although it was George Thorogood on lead guitar and not
Jerry Garcia for my first show, I continued to find myself drawn to bands who
played epic shows.
In concert, I have seen The Other Ones, Furthur, RatDog, the
Mickey Hart Band and Bruce Hornsby. I have booked a show with Vince
Welnick & The Tubes, promoted shows with tribute bands like the JugglingSuns/Solar Circus, but I
unfortunately never saw the Grateful Dead perform. This motivated me in
November to adventure to see Dark Start Orchestra’s first set at Stage
AE. Not a “cover band” but in their words a “spirit band” who for
the past 18 years have embarked on a single mission: reincarnate exact setlists
from the Grateful Dead's tour catalog. Well for the 900+ in attendance,
the band is doing what they set out to do and we were treated to November 12,
1989’s set from the Greek Theatre.
Highlight song of the evening for me was “Tennessee Jed”, but I
was also completely blown away by keyboardist Rob Barraco. I did not
realize the extent of his resume – the man has played with Phil Lesh and
Friends, Chris Robinson & New Earth Mud and The Dead to name a few.
And speaking of blowing me away, the oscillating fan that rhythm guitarist Rob
Eaton had pointed directly at his hair was right out of the Maxell Tape Blown
Away Ad. Which segues right into the fact that I did not see any tapers
last night. A couple of 40-somethings using their smart-phones to record
videos, but then again it is 2015. It was not all roses since drummers
Rob Koritz & Dino English were both extremely robotic in their playing and
seemed to be going thru the motions behind their elaborate gear set-up.
Maybe it is on me for not sticking around for the second set. Regardless,
at the show, I feel I got another taste of what started in the San Francisco
Bay Area in 1965 and what lives today.
For those who did not get a chance to wish a ‘Fare Thee Well’ this
summer, I would recommend checking out this band, but then again
there is also the option of seeing John Mayer fronting Dead &
Company. The music does not seem to stop.
Thank you for reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment