194. 1990-12-12 149736 Denver 13:45
Main theme at 1:08 and 5:26.
First verse at 5:49.
Verse melody at 8:55.
Goes into Terrapin Station.
The jump-off is rather jaunty. Vince is tinkling out the main theme quite a bit at first, but he switches to a more legato thing after a little while. Lesh puts on some kind of xylophone MIDI effect as we approach the end of the first minute, and then Garcia starts playing the theme. He then quotes the verse melody as Phil switches back to bass tones. I cannot hear Hornsby at all here, although the archive has him listed as a musician. Weir is present but sort of quiet and tame.
At 4:28 Garcia starts fiddling with a Sputnik line, and this gets Vince swirling around as the band kicks up a bit. The latter brings them back to earth at 5:21 by returning to the theme, and the band falls into line. Garcia plays the theme again, something he hasn’t been doing much of lately. They go to the verse, closing the first chapter of Dark Star.
Garcia starts back in with intro-style melodic playing, and Welnick tinkles the theme some more. After a minute or so Jerry puts on some distortion, but they’re still keeping it close to home. Lesh plays with the effects some more, starting at about 8:25, and Weir starts playing something that sounds like a bedspring. Garcia runs through the verse melody while all this is happening. It now seems like Hornsby might be here after all, playing an electric piano or something…if so, he’s been keeping to a supporting role, but here he adds some futuristic blorpy textures (unless that’s Vince’s left hand).
There’s a lull at 11:25, and Garcia starts playing flute. He changes the effects a few times, winding up a piccolo, and they fiddle around a bit. The jam seems like it’s about to get interesting now, as they leave the Dark Star pattern behind. As the music shifts and swells, Jerry starts strumming Terrapin Station, and it’s over.
This is rather minimal, but altogether pleasant. They never explore outside the confines of a basic Dark Star jam, except in the last couple minutes when it’s just about over. If one were to regard it as something akin to Bird Song, then perhaps one would be less likely to be disappointed at how short and conservative it is for Dark Star.
195. 1990-12-14 149757 Denver 8:40
Main theme at 1:10, 2:58, and 4:00.
Verse melody at 1:23.
Second verse at 4:21.
Goes into I Need a Miracle.
This is, I suppose, the second half of the rendition from the 12th. The end jam of He’s Gone hints at the I Need a Miracle toward which they’re ultimately headed, but Space is floaty and meditative, and as it wraps up Garcia starts to allude to Dark Star. Garcia toys around with the theme, then almost fakes the band into the intro lick, but they keep going. Once again, I can’t really tell what Hornsby is doing, if he’s doing anything, and Weir is less of a factor than usual.
Lesh kicks off the theme after about a minute, and again Jerry plays the theme and then the verse melody, just as he did in the back half of the front half. He then transforms into a French horn, but as is par for the course, this doesn’t last particularly long. They wander around a little, but it keeps coming back to the theme, and this leads us to the verse at 4:21.
They finally get a little momentum going not long after the verse, although they’re still playing it pretty straight. It starts to get really good when Garcia kicks on the distortion and the band fires up toward the end, but they’re just gearing up for I Need a Miracle.
This doesn’t add very much to the version that was begun on the 12th, or really to the set in which it appears. Of course it is pleasant music, but without much of a core or a backbone. They almost seem to be just going through the motions here. I thought maybe attaching this to the first half would flesh it out into a full-fledged rendition, but I’d be inclined to just skip this part if I listened again.
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