Jam – 2013-05-14 – Carroll’s

ds130514This was a week with conflict amongst our schedules and Scott was this week’s odd-man out, leaving Lee to do all the drumming by himself. You wouldn’t know it by walking into the Studio because there were two drum kits setup when we arrived. Kevin took care of that controversy with the front office and we survived with the extra kit without having to pay for it. While we survived, Lee thrived with that extra kit as he took each and every symbol he could from it and encircled his thrones with a lot of hardware.

Speaking of encircling, Alan setup next to Kevin’s by placing his amp right next to Kevin’s in an attempt to get better stereo separation in the recording. Time will tell if it improved the recording. I had hopes of using one of the great Fuchs Fender Twin Reverb amps that Carroll’s had in the studio, but when I plugged my guitar into it, the amp had a crackling sound which made me abandon it for one of the more traditional reissue Twin Reverbs. Not a big deal as the amp I ended up using had a nice chirpy tone and it sounded good throughout the night.

Donna was there for the entire first set with the exception of the Scarlet Begonias opener. Too bad because she actually worked on Scarlet yet didn’t get to play it with us. These days, you have to get to the jam right on time in order not to be left out of the opening numbers. She was able to join us thereafter starting with the It’s All Over Now all the way through the Dancing in the Streets which ended the first set. I think our Looks Like Rain was our best version of that song together to date. On the other hand, the Deep Elem Blue devolved into a really bad dirge before we knew it and represented one of the low points of the first set.

For the second set I wanted to work on some songs, specifically the Help on the Way and the Sailor Saint. To accomplish this I somehow created a nice opening combination for the second set that included the Help–>Slipknot! to open but instead of the Franklin’s Tower, we opted to throw caution into the wind and play a Dark Star out of the Slipknot! It worked out really well in it gave us some time to enjoy a spacy jam and a transitional opportunity to head into a Sailor Saint. We did the first half of the Dark Star and headed into the Sailor Saint from there. That was good stuff and somehow naturally at the end of the Saint of Circumstance, we were in good position to flow right back into the Dark Star to complete it. Once completed, the Dark Star was yearning for a capper and the Around and Around was such a song. An excellent way to put a ribbon an this significant piece of music we just played.

We were able to get in a few more songs before calling it a night which was a pretty good one. As far as guests we had Mike and Mindy and one additional person for the last part of the second set. Freakin’ Out once again.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/05-14-13

Jam – 2013-05-09 – Carroll’s

ds130509In the world of the Grateful Dead, the month of May is to be celebrated for all the great music that was generated in May 1977.  The Grateful Dead know how to honor this month in that they just released of a 5-show box set of several May 1977 shows.  Deastein also knows how to honor the month by playing a show when we happen upon an anniversary date.  Many in the Grateful Dead family reflexively look back at the May 1977 and believe the May 8, 1977 Cornell show is the show to end all shows.  Obviously the Grateful Dead didn’t rest on their laurels as they responded to that great performance on May 8 and drove west to Buffalo the following day to blow the roof off that arena in what I consider a hotter show than they infamous Cornell 77 show.  Let the arguments begin.

It being Thursday, May 9, 2013 gave Deadstein the opportunity to pay homage to this great Buffalo show and we did.  This was not a poultry show, foul from having its wings clipped, as a matter of fact I don’t even this Buffalo wings were invented at the time of this show.  All there was to chew on at time was pure iron enriched red Buffalo meat, no chicken, no blue cheese and G-d knows, no celery.

The beefiness of the show is apparent in its high powered first set, book-ended by the hottest parts of Blues for Allah.  Help-Slip Franklins to open and a Music Never Stopped to close the first set.  Additionally, you follow the opener with a Cassidy and you sprinkle in a bunch of other classic Jerry and Bob songs and you have a great first set.

Realizing that we were playing this week on May 9 gave me the foresight to call for the Buffalo show to be played. I got a setlist with MP3s out to everyone early on so they could give it a listen and hopefully practice a bit.  I doubt anyone did any practicing but I personally took the opportunity to really try to get some of my Help on the Ways chops in my repertoire.  I spent a lot of time in the days leading up to the jam trying to figure out most of the Help on the Way lead and I got that pretty much under my belt by the time the jam rolled around.  When it was time to play it, I was able to recall what I had practiced and gave a pretty good effort.  Since we were playing the May 9, 1977 version, I was provided two bites at the apple in  this was a rare Help on the Way with a double-rounded lead.  Additionally, I tried to point out to everyone that we were going to try to perform the Help on the Way and Slipknot! in the manner they played it in 1977.  This was a little different than the Deadstein norm.  Sure notes were missed and flubbed all over the place, but for the most part, this was one of our most coherent Help-Slip Franklins.

Not only did my home practice get me to play a semi-legitimate version of the Help on the Way, but it got my fingers working well in that my dexterity and musical thinking were on track all night long making playing an easy and fun experience for me.  Even the Franklins Tower was greatly aided by a little practice I had been doing with the mixolydian modes earlier in the week.  This gave me a whole new perspective on the song.  I also learned the intro and outro of the Franklins which I had not addressed since first learning it 25 years ago.  I think we also had a cool ending of the Franklin’s Tower, mellowing our after the final lead to come back with a little vocal “roll away the dew” before finishing up with the outro.

Donna joined us just in time for the Franklin’s Tower and stayed with us through the Ship of Fools in the second set.  The Help-Slip-Franklins was a tremendous warm-up and got us ready for the Cassidy to follow.  I think Donna and I did well to sing the song, our best version to date, and the jam was also nice and strong.  While I failed to remind everyone that the ’77 version didn’t have a Ab minor whip in it, I forcefully ended the jam to the song and snuffed out any thoughts of the Ab minor whip before it manifested itself.

There were several parts of the 1977 feel that made songs more abbreviated than typical.  The stand alone Mexicali Blues was fast and the two leads only got to experience one round per lead.  This was short to the point.  The Brown-Eyed Women which preceded the Mexicali also enjoyed a nice relaxed 1977 tempo, it wasn’t the slow 1972 tempo nor was it the high paced tempo from 1982.  It was reminiscent of a 1977 Brown-Eyed Women and it was just right.  Like the Mexicali Blues, the stand-alone Big River was also very quick.  Not that the leads were short, just that the tempo was very fast.  I worked on some of the Jerry tempos prior to the jam at home and when it came to sustaining that tempo, we didn’t have too much of an issue.  This was one of a more peppy Big Rivers to date and it felt pretty good.  The Tennessee Jed was also very well played as we were in a grove by that time in the evening.

Since Deadstein and Donna don’t really know how to play Sunrise we skipped that song from the setlist when it came time to play it, no big deal.  Additionally, Donna didn’t really know her part to the Music Never Stopped, so I played the actual version a few times prior to use jamming it to help her get it.  Music Never Stopped is one the great opportunities for Donna to shine and Donna did a great job of it when her time came.  This was a Deadstein first to have Donna based Music Never Stopped and it was great to hear.  I kind of surprised people with the quick turnover from the first part of the Music Never Stopped jam to the second part of the jam, but that is the way it was played in 1977.  What I couldn’t emulate was the greatness that is this jam from May 9, 1977 in that Jerry really rocked the world with that version.  One of the best.

Amazingly enough, we played that first set and found ourselves 30 minutes ahead of the game at 9:30 with a first set behind us.  At that “pernt” we decided to do the rhyme and then headed right into the opening of the second set which was a slow Bertha into a Good Lovin’.  I went over the transition that they did to get from the Bertha to the Good Lovin’ in 1977 and we hit it right on.  The only problem is that our entrance into the actual Good Lovin’ was terrible immediately following the transition and it took us a few measures to get into synchronicity. Since that was our only real issue with the opening combo, I still consider it a success.

Following another min-break we began the second set in earnest including the Ship of Fools in Bb.  This too was well performed, considering that Bb is not our traditional key for that song.  The Ship of Fools also represented Donna’s last song with us as 10:30 was her midnight.  This left us with the Estimated –> Other One –> Drums to complete the first half of the Second Set.  The playing of the Estimated was well done up to the jam.  Once the jam hit, I got the sense everyone was into a long drawn-out transition into the Other One as opposed to taking the time to play and enjoy the Estimated jam.  Transitions should only take seconds and only a few measures and not minutes, I find we often take way too much time trying to transition into something as opposed to just playing the jam in front of us.  With this stated, Kevin was oblivious to the pending Other One, no matter how obvious the long transition was, as he was sitting on the sidelines when it was his turn to begin the Other One.  I felt as if I had to grab the Other One by the horns and get it going because I felt the night slipping from us at that moment.  People were fading and losing focus and desire to play with any intention.  It ’twas a shame.

A drum solo was followed by a min-space into a Not Fade Away.  I thought the Not Fade was pretty good but Scott and Kevin were fading quickly were having trouble finding the groove of what should be some of the easiest of grooves for a Grateful Dead band to play.  The following Comes a Time had a terrible entrance where we were all on different pages, literally as Kevin couldn’t figure out how to turn to a proper page in his song book. Fortunately there were only a couple of songs to go for the setlist at that point and the Sugar Magnolia whipped back into shape. The show’s encore of Uncle John’s Band was played in a comfortable fashion tying up a few loose ends generated by our typical late-night inabilities.

We found ourselves with a good 30-40 minutes of music to play when we completed the Uncle John’s Band so we decided to try to hit up some good non-Dead lead guitar types of songs.  Alan thought the lead-G-ds were watching my back on this night, so he thought it was a good opportunity to take advantage of what was going on.  The While My Guitar Gently Weeps and Comfortably Numb were the results of these feeling.  I hadn’t practiced either one in preparation for the week’s music, so when lead time came, I was really flying by the seat of my pants.  I may have had a few good notes, but for the most part, I didn’t like how I performed during these two songs.

Afterwards it was time to get back to some good old Grateful Dead to close the night.  I was yearning for something mellow and a Black Peter was suggested.  I think it was a good choice because we did pretty well on it and our playing of the break in the middle of the song was one of Deadstein’s best that I recall in our long, drawn-out history.  At the conclusion of the Peter I called for the One More Saturday Night to close and that was a great cap to an excellent evening of music as this song was also pretty well performed considering we started it just after midnight.

It was definitely a satisfying night of music and it was a great tribute to a great show in a great month by a great band.  While we had no guests to enjoy the music being made, at least Rich’s two MP3 recorders were there to capture the experience, one picking up the room sounds while the other picking up the music going through the mixing board.  Now it is up to me to try my best to get these two recordings into sync so we can enjoy the best of both worlds why trying to avoid the worst of them all. May the Freak be with You.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/05-09-13

Jam – 2013-04-30 – Carroll’s

ds130430Everyone was back this week to partake in the freakiness and we were ready to rock. Well most of us were as it took Donna and her personal soundman, Bill, a few songs to get up and running. By the 5th song or so the room was sounding good and we were comfortable with what we were doing. Short of Bill, Steve and Lindsey were our only guests for the night.

The Feel Like a Stranger was a nice strong beefy beginning to the night and we kept the protein level high for most of night. You can tell Rich and Donna have been working together on the That’s What Love Will Make You Do and the Jack Straw in the middle of the first set was a nice way to get back to the sirloin. Here Comes Sunshine China Rider was a nice closer even though we totally butchered the middle jam of the China Cat. The Rider was better than usual.

For the second set, Donna asked why we wait for her to leave to play the Beatles, so we started the second set with some. The Dear Prudence was a good transition from Jerry to John and Paul as I do consider Dear Prudence a Jerry Garcia Band song as opposed to the Beatles. The Eight Days a Week was really fun and the Oh Darling with Donna on lead was the highlight of that segment. With the Love Me Do we over stayed our Liverpool welcome. We headed back to San Francisco via Jamaica with a Harder They Come and Ripple to bid Bill and Donna a farewell.

We got in four pretty powerful songs afterwards to close the night. A proposed Black Muddy River was nixed as a closer as everyone agreed that it was a bummer, so we played the Music Never Stopped. Jamming the song really enforced the concept of not wanting the music to stop, but it was midnight and we had to pack up and wait to jam again. Freak out.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/04-30-13

Jam – 2013-04-23 – Carroll’s

ds130423Deadstein found itself having to play on a Tuesday night and we couldn’t synchronize our schedules to get everyone to the jam. This week’s odd-man out was Rich and for a rare time, we played a full jam without any keyboards at all.

Without Rich at the jam, we found ourselves without any guests for the night. It was just the music there for us to enjoy. Alan commented on how he thought that there seemed to be a wet blanket over us for the night, preventing us from letting our hair down and enjoy the music we created. He could exactly put his finger on it, if it was a lack of piano, or a lack of the additional reverberation and feedback the piano microphones provides or if it was a lack of feedback we receive from the guests in the room that tend to come in on Rich’s freakin’ coat-tails.
In an effort to fight this potential feeling, Donna came in requesting that we fill the set with a bunch of peppy songs. That led us to a overly peppy opening of a Cumberland Blues. While not a typical opener, it did get us going and on a peppy directly leading us to another peppy follower, the Passenger. Despite Donna’s wishes, you can’t stay peppy all night, so by the 3rd song, the Ramble on Rose, we had a bit of a reprieve. Without Rich in the Studio to sing most of the Jerry numbers, it was up to me to fill in on some of those songs. Ramble on Rose was one such songs that was a fun time for me to sing. The Bobby McGee that followed lacked some of the desired pep but it was a nice song for me and Donna to sing together.

At home earlier in the week, I had worked on some of the Music Never Stopped riffs that I had yet to try to learn ever since I began playing Jerry Garcia guitar a few years ago. It was nice to finally have some direction with respect to playing that song and now I look forward to getting better and better at it as time marches on. Likewise, hopefully Donna can get some of those classic late 70’s Music Never Stopped Donna belts under her belt. There is a lot on redundancy in that sentence.

Since Rich wasn’t there we didn’t have his MP3 recorder to capture the night’s music. I used my iPhone to record whatever I could until I ran out of battery power and then Alan continued with his iPhone. It doesn’t make the best sounding recordings, but you can tell what happened by listening, so it is worth keeping for posterity’s sake.

It needs to be mentioned that this week in Deadstein saw the passing of Richie Havens. Richie had a profound impact on the early history of Deadstein and as such, we are joined at the beard with Richie and wish him nothing but the best as he begins serenading heaven with his classic version of Freedom. In memory of Richie’s passing, we did play a moving He’s Gone out of the New Speedway Boogie. Finally, to close the jam, we played a It’s All Over Now Baby Blue. Not only are the words fitting in this situation, but this is one of the few songs Richie sang with Deadstein back in the early 1990’s. The Times They are a Changin’ was the other song we played with Richie.

For the second set, I wanted to get back to playing a If I Had the World to Give so we started with that, and the song transitioned into a nice Estimated Eyes which seem to have some nice momentum associated with it. We did toy around with the Stir It Up so hopefully everyone becomes a little more familiar with that song, including Donna, who has a big role in it. I also introduced Donna to the I’ll Be With Thee concept during our half time break. We played through that a bit, also in hopes that one day we can pull that off as a whole band. Wouldn’t that be something?

To view a playlist of the boring video shots of the first 8 songs see below:

 

Freekdom! RIP Richie

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/04-23-13

Jam – 2013-04-16 – Carroll’s

ds130416T-Woos-day night in the middle of April and Deadstein is marching through its spring season. This week we marched without Alan, who called in sick, and played with just one guitarist. This gave me an opportunity to play a bit more Jerry Garcia Band than we would have typically played if Alan was there. Rather than having a surprise guitarist, the night’s surprise was a surprise drummer, in the form of Bill Sloan. He came to hang with us and worked on the PA system throughout the night. Additionally, he did a bit of the round-robin with both Scott and Lee, playing drums with us on several of our songs.

Shortly after 11pm, Bill left with Donna leaving the rest of us to close out the night. Scott Bayer, was our only other guest arriving late in the night only the have Carol listen to a song or two before the 12-midnight time hit us.

Trying to think of an opener at the time was a challenge and I snuck in the Slow Train Coming to get us going. I thought it was pretty good and definitely got us moving down the line. We all expected Rich to call for the Next Time You See Me Next, but we were surprised when the You Win Again Came out of his mouth. We began a Love in the Afternoon to get on the Garcia Band roll and that is about when Donna entered. From then on we performed lots of Jerry songs including a That’s Alright Mama which Rich brought in the lyrics for. That had a nice feel to it although I lack the necessary dexterity to pull that one off too well.

I think the It’s No Use had a real nice groovy feel to it, I know Donna and I don’t necessarily agree to the definition of groovy, but I think this song may have approached it. Truckin’ was Donna’s last song with us as she left at the beginning of the end of the Truckin’ jam and we explored that for a while after she left, taking it into the Other One. We didn’t have too much time left at that point but we made the best of it with the Catfish and the Taxman in honor of April 15 which just passed us by. To close I happened to open right to the Good Night Irene and it was an omen. A good one at that as I really enjoyed that song.

For this week’s music, Rich forwarded me the raw MP3 files from his 2 recorders and I did my best to mix them together. Hopefully I’ll get back to some previous week’s music that he gave me at the last jam. Till then, Freak in not out.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/04-16-13

Jam – 2013-04-10 – Carroll’s

ds130410Though it was April 10, 2013, there was a feeling deep inside Kevin’s gut that was yearning for it to be April 12, 1983. Who could blame his gut? That night at Binghamton was pretty magical for all of us who were there, not just Kevin who enjoyed his first show that night. With all these thoughts in our minds, there was a small desire to relive and play some of the great moments from that show. Since it was a couple of nights off from the actual anniversary, I didn’t feel compelled to give it the honor of Deadstein celebrating the night that it probably deserved, but the presence of the Broome County Arena was never far from my mind as the night progressed.

We all arrived early and ready to play, psyched everyone was health and accounted for. We decided to play the opening of the 4/12/83 show including the Getaway–> Greatest Story followed by a Birdsong. Much like 1983, the 2013 version was a strong opening and a positive omen with respect to things to come for the night.

From this strong opening, we decided to stray a bit but kept our eye on Binghamton as the night progressed. This resulted in the mid-set Let It Grow With Donna singing with us for the first set we selected a few songs that catered to her style such as the I Shall Be release, which we had been avoiding for the past several weeks. We ended the first set with a nice Might As Well, which when executed, is a nice exciting way to end a set.

With Donna only available for a portion of the beginning of set 2, we decided to throw a Playing in the Band at her as a way for her to bid us a fond-farewell as we transitioned into a spacey Playing in the Band jam. We eventually found our way to a China Doll and back into the Playing in the Band. I think that was a good little segment of music.

To close the night we were reach a bit and I suggested playing the last Beatles song in the book, The Word. That was pretty good. We continued in the Beatles “W” section and played “With a Little Help From Your Friends” and closed the night with a While My Guitar Gently Weeps. That was a very satisfying way to close out the night. Providing the initiative to come back and freak-out with Deadstein one more time.

The audio files are provided in the following folder:
http://deadstein.com/audio/04-10-13

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