28609 Port Chester, NY 16:06 + Main Ten Jam 5:51 + Jam 2:58.
Main theme at 5:45.
First verse at 6:38.
Goes into Dancing in the Streets after the Main Ten Jam.
The last known Dark Star of 1970 begins with Garcia playing a repeating pattern that flirts with the main theme. Lesh steps out a little, but everyone is playing gently here, and there is no real lead line. They seem to be suggesting E minor quite a bit as they go on, and the music sort of broods along. Garcia plays a flourish of triplets at 4:12 that stands out as it skims over the top, but for the most part they are blending their instruments into a larger whole. At 5:45 Garcia starts to fire up the main theme, but they maintain a light weave right up to the verse, which is laid in gently.
Coming out of the verse, it seems they are keen to maintain the meditative feel of the piece. Space brings us down to almost nothing but some cymbals. Someone makes bird noises, eliciting a lot of laughter at 9:10; Weir jokingly admonishes the crowd, “This is serious!” The crowd seems rather fired up for the occasion, even as the band tries to play a quiet and spellbinding Dark Star. Space stays at a minimum for a good stretch here, and when the intensity increases it is more or less a deluge of sound, but not a barrage of notes. Again there is some bells or glockenspiel as we near the end of space, and then a repeated note that is almost like a beeping. Garcia finally starts playing The Main Ten, and the band picks it up.
This is also played rather gently, although as is to be expected it gathers some momentum as it goes along. By about 3:50 this turns into a one-chord vamp, and the band seems to consider moving on to something else, but they just sort of hover there for a while. A little bit after the 5 minute mark Garcia starts hinting at a return to Dark Star, but instead they get into another jam that drifts toward Dancing in the Streets. After a couple verses of this, they break into Soulful Strut, and this ends with what briefly sounds like a Dark Star jam, so this could also be seen as a continuation of Dark Star...
The main portion of this is understated but quite beautiful, with a very effective space after the verse. Once they come out of space the jamming seems a bit listless, though, although not without charm altogether. To me this is an ambiguous version: one could surmise that they are running out of ideas for Dark Star, but one could just as easily say that they are still uncovering new possibilities.
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