Friday, May 21, 2021

49. 1969-03-29

141435 Las Vegas 21:19 (21:01)
Main theme at 4:53.
First verse at 5:48.
Sputnik at 10:58.
Main theme at 15:25.
Verse melody at 16:12.
Bright Star at 17:20.
Falling Star at 18:18.
Main theme at 18:53.
Second verse at 19:46.
Goes into St. Stephen


“The next one we’re going to do is something we wrote especially for the Ice Palace here in Las Vegas. We wrote it this morning.”


--Mickey Hart


There is an interesting sort of swell at the beginning before Garcia starts playing lines. When he comes in, he’s in good form, with some excellent passages before the verse. There’s not a lot of exploration in the introductory jam, but by the time we get to the verse this would already be a top version from early 1968!


After the verse, Weir lays a base down and TC plays an ascending flourish before Garcia starts tolling; this time, Lesh is not highlighted in this section, unlike in other recent renditions. He comes to the fore a bit more as Garcia starts playing lead lines again, however. At the same time, TC and Weir recede a bit (at least in this mix) which somewhat mitigates what otherwise would be an early peak soon after the 9 minute mark.


There is a little dynamic retrenchment after this, and then Garcia gets things rolling again with some heavy riffing from about 10:25. This rather quickly pulls back into what feels like a sort of early Sputnik, however. Lesh makes this one rather heavy in the front half, with heavy notes that don’t come with an entirely predictable spacing. On the second half, Lesh plays a lighter series of runs, and the whole thing winds up in a little staccato interlude that is quite different and remarkable, before Garcia finally switches on the insect weirdness.


One of the drummers is scratching something quite loudly during this insect interlude, which soon gets hairy and weird. When Garcia switches back to a more quotidian tone, the jam gets heavy for a while. There’s a sudden break at around 15 minutes, though, which threatens to become a moment of confusion, so Garcia starts hammering on the main theme. It’s early yet, however, so rather than the verse, they follow this up with the verse melody.


This opens up into a rather furious section, with everyone going gangbusters right into a quasi-Bright Star at 17:20. Perversely, as Bright Star emerges, things quiet down a bit, but they build it back up before discharging it in a rather extended and spirited Falling Star. This leads directly to the main theme and the verse.


This is another excellent version, with outstanding work from Lesh and Garcia. It kicks up a fuss at times, but seems to hold back from going over the top. In small ways, they seem to be pushing and prodding at the form, and this yields some gratifying moments of weirdness although, as yet, these don’t last long. Very good overall.


What was said:

Sunday, May 16, 2021

48. 1969-03-28

81543 Modesto 22:45

Main theme at 2:28.
Main theme at 4:32.
First verse at 5:56.
Sputnik at 13:53.
Verse melody at 18:01.
Bright Star at 18:35.
Falling Star at 19:17.
Main theme at 19:39.
Second verse at 21:07.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Garcia flicks on the bridge pickup and gets down to business early, welcoming us with a little feedback and some particularly limber licks. He goes to the main theme very early, but he doesn’t stay there, as this is not going to be a quick run-through like last time. However, the main theme seems to remain as a quasi-perceptible axis around which the early jam revolves, while at the same time Garcia at times seems to be pushing against the tonality of the piece a bit. One wonders whether he is starting to get restless with the harmonic form of Dark Star, which will of course be broken open in various ways in future days.


When Jerry returns to the main theme a couple minutes later, he really lays into it, and it seems like the verse is bound to follow. However, he unspools the theme into a repetitive little bouncy section which unloads itself into another piercing lead section, which in turn quickly winds down and then leads to the verse. A small detour, then, but nonetheless an interesting one.


The immediate aftermath of the verse again puts the spotlight on Lesh, which seems to be common lately, before Garcia starts banging around on the bell tones. The transition to the next section is remarkable, as Jerry again unleashes some feedback, from which his lead emerges like a spotlight through the fog. In fact, there is an awful lot of feedback on this version; it could almost be said to be the theme of this Dark Star, although it is never allowed to overwhelm things.


At about the 9 minute mark, Garcia is playing bouncy little leads, and then pausing as Weir answers him with little bursts of chiming chords, as if they are revving up for the jam. Then, at 9:35 they simultaneously dig in for a longer passage, with Weir acting as a springboard for Jerry’s soaring lead, until, at 10:04, Garcia brings it down to a repeating two-note figure which appears to be setting the stage for a Sputnik, or in any case another phase of the jam. Again, what stands out is how responsive they are to one another, and how genuinely collaborative the jams have become.


This settles into a spacey interlude, with feedback again playing a role. Lesh begins calling for the verse melody at around 10:37, but at 10:55 Garcia starts playing a bright melody unlike anything we’ve heard yet in Dark Star, and which reminds me of what he’ll play over the “Soulful Strut” modules that lie in the future. However, this makes its way back to more familiar territory in fairly short order.


By 12:55, the verse melody seems imminent, but instead the band comes to a rousing peak which functions much like Bright Star, without ever quite articulating the relevant notes. After cresting the peak, at 13:35 there is a somewhat sudden drop into a pre-Sputnik sequence until, at 13:53, Sputnik duly appears.


Tonight Garcia displays extra enthusiasm for the little double stops at the end of Sputnik, but then the band almost comes to a stop before the insect weirdness gets things moving again. One is almost tempted to count the passage beginning at 15:48 as the verse melody; the melody isn’t really played, although it’s hinted at, and we wind up dropping into E minor. As we flip back to the A, Garcia is playing some piercing and frenetic lines, and the excitement level is rather high.


At 18:01, Garcia clearly and powerfully initiates the verse melody, and the drop back to the E is charged by Lesh’s rather explosive remarks. After all that, they tear into a Bright Star that takes the whole thing over the top! This is followed by the heavens opening to emit a brain-piercing Falling Star.


Even the return to the main theme is remarkable tonight, as Garcia adds in grace notes and seems to roll through the riff, then switches to a staccato peppering, so that rather than a return to normalcy, the appearance of the theme here is another opportunity for expression. Garcia lays the vibrato in thick on the second verse; he’s probably still excited by the jam he’s just played. Anyway, I know I am.

This is an absolutely outstanding Dark Star. It is one of the most dynamic, varied, and exciting renditions they have played up to this point. Absolutely outstanding. And, absolutely outstanding! What else can I say? Outstanding.


What was said
:

Friday, May 7, 2021

47: 1969-03-22

8994 Pasadena 14:47
Main theme at 2:01.
First verse at 2:23.
Verse melody at 6:05.
Sputnik at 9:28.
Bright Star at 11:27.
Falling Star at 12:17.
Main theme at 12:42.
Second verse at 13:17.
Goes into St. Stephen.

TC is still hammering the ROR at the beginning. Garcia sounds ready to go when the bell rings today; he gets some nice leads in before even a minute has passed. He seems quite attentive to his peers are doing—at around 1:17 he’s tickled by Weir is doing, and they tangle themselves up together for a while. At 1:41 a breach opens up and TC jumps in with some licks that Garcia then grabs ahold of and transforms beginning at 1:48.

However, the first verse comes quickly, despite all that promise. Garcia picks up where he left off at the close of the verse, bouncing bright guitar leads off the band. At 4:35 there is a quasi-Bright Star passage, and this breaks out again at the 5 minute mark. This leads to a series of little peaks; Lesh and Weir are pushing, and Garcia is quite responsive. They quiet down at around the 6 minute mark, and Jerry puts in the verse melody, which allows them to kick it up again, a bit, on the E minor.

All three string players are effusive here, with Weir ascending above Jerry for a while, which adds to the sense of excitement. They all seem tuned in to one another quite closely tonight; as if by prior consensus, they reel it in at about 7:18, and Garcia begins his bell-like tolling on another E minor. This results in a little build-up which is full of promise and foreboding, and soon Garcia is hinting at a Sputnik in the offing.

At 8:58 Garcia returns them to an A major, and submits some brighter licks. The tension mounts until a taut Sputnik finally emerges at 9:28. Garcia comes out with his weird insect sound, which he doesn’t stay with for long this time, instead building things back up, with both drummers engaged and adding to the urgency, as they push toward Bright Star. This continues the tense and urgent mood, pounding rather than flowing, until it is discharged in a (now somewhat rare) Falling Star.

At this point they are ready to wrap it up. It’s not clear whether there was a time constraint, or whether they felt they’d already poured so much concentrated energy into Dark Star that there was nothing left to do with it; the former seems more likely, given the short renditions of the songs that follow. For all its brevity, however, this is a fantastic version, with not a dull moment in it. There are deeper versions, and ones that range farther, but I pronounce this the little Dark Star that could!


What was said:

Friday, April 30, 2021

46. 1969-03-15



28798 San Francisco 20:30
Main theme at 4:35.
Main theme at 5:48.
First verse at 6:18.
Sputnik at 12:57.
Verse melody at 16:59.
Bright Star at 17:58.
Second verse at 18:53.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Dark Star follows Good Morning, Little Schoolgirl. TC is audible here on the ROR, but not very loud. Garcia plays some cool stuff, with little harmonic flourishes and insistent bass runs, but while the intro is not exactly low energy, it’s not up to much either, as it all sounds a little rote.


On the other hand, there are little variations and moments of interest that inspire hope for tonight’s offering, such as the little peak from around 4:15 that leads into the main theme. They are not ready for the verse right away, so some more jamming ensues. There is some weird drumming beginning at 5:07 that sounds like someone is banging on a chair, but it turns out to be Garcia scraping his strings! They return to the main theme, and cast it out very gently as a dynamic valley opens up for the verse.


After the verse Garcia lays out for a little while before he enters with his bell tones; when he fires up the lead at 8:22, he sounds like he means business. His runs before the ten minute mark seem to fire Phil up, and they lock in a little. This sequence represents a fairly typical instance of Dark Star dynamics in this era: Jerry and Phil kick up some dust and the band is flying at 10:04, when they start to take it back down, so by 10:18 Garcia is playing some delicate runs, and things start winding down; then they start building it back up again, so by 11:20 the band is hitting another little peak; and, by 11:45, they are again playing fairly quietly.


Garcia pedals on some pre-Main Theme licks for a bit, but it soon becomes evident they are heading for Sputnik, which has become sort of the main event of the middle jam lately. This one gets reasonably gnarly for a bit, and Jerry comes out of it with his weird insect sound again, in what seems to be standard operating procedure now. This part is pleasingly weird tonight although, as is usual for the era, they don’t linger with the weirdness for long, as they quickly build up, cowbell in tow, to the verse melody. The E minor bit builds to a quite stirring Bright Star, and then the band winds down and eases into the second verse.


It’s a nice rendition, not earth-shattering but not chopped liver. That’s all I’ve got!


What was said:

Friday, April 23, 2021

45. 1969-03-02




3344 Fillmore West 20:27 (20:23 actua


Main theme at 5:11.
First verse at 5:34.
Sputnik at 12:15.
Verse melody at 16:42.
Main theme at 17:18.
Bright Star at 17:41.
Main theme at 18:25.
Second verse at 18:51.
Goes into St. Stephen.


This opens the show. The tempo feels brisk tonight, and this feels a bit busy from the outset, as though everyone has had a few cups of coffee. Garcia begins with the tolling bell sound before playing some opening leads. TC, who is audible tonight, unleashes a wild little ascending swirl at 2:47, and Garcia responds with some mirroring lines, in a sort of reversal of their usual roles, although TC never really takes over.

From about 3:30 there is a bouncy little passage that has a quasi-Sputnik feel to it. Everything feels a little frenetic; the mood is not relaxed tonight. At 4:35, Garcia starts pushing toward the main theme, and we get to this and then the verse in short order. There are some nice bass figures after the verse before Garcia starts tolling. When Garcia comes in at 7:39, things seem to be a little calmer than they were in the intro section. He seems to be playing off TC again for a while, which is a promising development.

So far there are several interludes where they seem to be revving up for something, but it’s never clear exactly what. After a bit of treading water around the 9 minute mark, they somewhat unexpectedly ease into a subdued, spacey place, although even this seems a little jittery around the edges tonight. The return trip, however, is measured and fairly satisfying, as they take their time building back up.

Sometime before the 12 minute mark they seem to have returned to full strength, but it’s not clear what they’re aiming for…on the one hand, it’s a mark of maturity that they don’t feel the need to break into a full crescendo after such a soft interlude; on the other, the jam feels a little bit aimless. At 12:15, Garcia begins softly playing some Sputnik licks, and this solves the problem of a destination, for now. TC plays some dramatic flourishes in the Sputnik that I don’t think we’ve heard before, although I may be mistaken. At around 13:35 Garcia is playing a very staccato take on Sputnik, and these factors make this one different from what we usually expect.

Jerry again comes out of it with the “insect weirdness” (JSegel’s term) effect deployed, and he stays with it for a while here. As we’ve heard him do lately, Garcia begins sketching the outlines of Bright Star at 15:50 or so, which then seems to be heading to the main theme, before instead discharging itself in the verse melody. They quickly move to the main theme, but then we do get a Bright Star section, and a nice little crescendo, though nothing too dramatic. After a quick return to the theme, the second verse comes, and we’re out.

This is a fine version; the band is playing at a very high level in this period, with a sophistication and sensitivity that astounds the listener who has followed the development of the song thus far. For all that, this one seems a little understated. Almost every Dark Star since the Dream Bowl versions has seemed a little restrained, with the obvious exception being 02-27; it’s to their credit that they don’t shoot for a crushing peak every time out, as this would get predictable and boring—assuming, of course, that there are ongoing, attentive listeners, rather than a concert-going public who may never hear another version. This one in particular doesn’t seem to try too much, or go too far, but I’d still emphasize that the baseline for Dark Star has gotten very high.


What was said:

Friday, April 16, 2021

44. 1969-03-01



138788     Fillmore West    22:58

Main theme at 7:08.
First verse at 7:42.
Verse melody at 15:22.
Sputnik at 16:36.
Main theme at 19:52.
Bright Star at 20:25.
Main theme (briefly) at 21:09.
Second verse at 21:24.
Goes into St. Stephen.


This one comes after Mountains of the Moon, but for some reason the latter comes to a stop before Dark Star commences. TC is pretty loud on this version of the show, and the ROR rings out like days of old for a little while at the beginning, with an added little walk-up in between licks. As some of our commenters have pointed out, TC seems to shadow Garcia, and he never really takes the lead, but it is nice to hear him here as he provides another textural element. One thing that stands out here is how interesting and responsive Weir’s guitar playing has gotten on this song; although I think I’ve said that before, he continues to develop, and to impress.

Garcia comes in sounding thick and hazy on the Gibson tonight, and things seem to be happening early, in contrast to the last version. The instruments bunch together and kick up a little fuss right away, and by around 2:11 they’re hitting an early peak. Then they start to unspool it, and from around 3:00 there is a wonderful interlude where things get spacier and quieter until Garcia and then Weir start to insert little stabs that are reminiscent of the lead-up to Bright Star on the 27th.

They are taking their time tonight, and from 4:35 Jerry, Phil and TC ascend together as things get tighter and louder again, but they keep it reigned in, not going for another peak here, but rather they seem interested in pursuing a different new way to bring things together, with a light and loose mien that bespeaks a casual confidence in ones co-instrumentalists. At 4:55 Garcia and Lesh unleash a series of notes that sounds like they coordinated it beforehand, but is certainly just a serendipitous moment. This moves into a loping groove where they are again feinting and jabbing. At 6:17 TC seems to be feeling his oats, as he uncorks an organ burst that makes one think how rarely we hear such a thing. This leads to a little peak, albeit a relaxed one, that again winds down until Garcia starts the main theme at 7:08.

Here they are playing loosely and quietly, but not in a sloppy way; rather, the band seems to be delighting in the variety of moods that Dark Star occasions. Some nights the main theme comes in when they are at the peak of a crescendo; other times it rises from a soft interlude; here they are loosely and joyfully conversing, and it’s thrown out like an offhand remark. Everyone seems happy to hit the strings lightly and let the beat take care of itself, and it is in this same effervescent spirit that the verse comes easing in.

Lesh seems to finally be straining at the bit as the verse ends and the band fires up again, with Garcia playing the familiar bell tones. There is an intense, remarkable passage from 9:45 to 10:07, led by Lesh and Constanten with an assist from Weir, that blows through like a rainstorm, and when the band resumes normal operations it is with a greater sense of earnestness and focus. The jam is light and airy, but it feels more propulsive now, like it’s heading somewhere.

At 11:00, Garcia starts a windup that seems like it’s heading for Sputnik, and TC plays a syncopated accompaniment; this is his best Dark Star so far, as he manages to insert himself into the middle of whatever is happening at most points. Rather than Sputnik, this leads to a couple of little peaks beginning around the 12 minute mark, and Garcia gives us flashes of the main melody in between his more rhythmic expressions. At 12:48, things settle down again, and Jerry is playing with his volume knob. Then they build it back up a little, and tear it down again.

At 13:41 TC takes the lead! We have seen him be reluctant to do much with his opportunities before now, but he gets some nice licks in here. And he breaks out a new sound and takes another, rather loud, lead spot at around 15:02, although this is somewhat short-lived as Jerry soon breaks out the verse melody. As they clamor around the E minor TC is hanging in, but Garcia seems inclined to take charge again.

At 16:22 Jerry briefly flashes the main theme, and things seem to be in limbo for a few moments until Sputnik commences. TC plays some wild swirling passages the first time through, and then it all quiets down on the back half. Garcia engages his post-Sputnik effect and plays around with the verse melody a little, and check out Weir’s little swell at 16:38.

At 19:30 Garcia seems to want to build to a peak, and Lesh is happy to help, but before too much fur flies Jerry swings into the main theme. But they play around with it and it takes us to another little jam, and then they take a run through Bright Star which is perhaps a bit perfunctory. After a brief stab at the main theme, there is a neat little slowdown just before the final verse, which is taken at an elongated tempo.


If the 27th was triumphant and the 28th was brooding, my one-word adjective for this Dark Star would be “playful.” They seem to be reveling in their increased, and still increasing, sensitivity and responsiveness to one another, as they find Dark Star taking them places that perhaps they did not realize they could go. This is another fantastic version, and the horizon for Dark Star seems to expand every time they play it.


What was said:

Friday, April 9, 2021

43. 1969-02-28



139196 Fillmore West 20:04
Main theme at 3:27.
First verse at 4:06.
Sputnik at 11:12.
Verse melody at 17:26.
Main theme at 18:09.
Second verse at 18:30.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Dark Star comes out of Other One tonight. TC is at times more prominent in this particular mix (although this is not consistent), and we hear him come in right away with the ROR. Although it isn’t flashy—in fact it’s generally fairly simple—tonight’s mix allows us to hear how TC’s playing has become increasingly complementary and effective. Garcia sounds out of tune at the outset.

The introduction today has a distinct feel—not exactly tentative, but it lacks drama and direction, as though the band is holding open a space that was already there and waiting for them; rather than trying to get something happening, they go to the verse fairly early here. Garcia does something different with the exit from the verse this time, playing with the volume knob for a bit before he reverts to the familiar bell sound. He hammers on this for what seems a little longer than usual, and when he starts his lead it is in a questioning mood, as opposed to the confident burst of the previous night. The band is attuned to this mood, and the jam begins in a brooding manner. The music gains intensity as Garcia plays a quasi-Bright Star passage beginning at 8:21. As with the previous night, the dynamics of the band are subtle, as they avoid going all in early, while hitting smaller crescendos such as this one. Again, the variety of volume and intensity suggests that they are all paying close attention to one another.

Some feedback spikes lead into Sputnik, and these continue throughout this section; I had a hard time determining who was generating it, as all three string players are otherwise audible throughout, but I think it must be Weir (and Mr. Rain corroborates this below).

As Sputnik ends in a swell of feedback, the band almost comes to a halt, with Lesh and Garcia hinting at the main theme until Weir starts playing a funky little riff (13:35) which they latch onto, with Lesh eventually integrating his part for the verse. This goes on for several minutes. Garcia lays out until around 15:05, when he enters and starts building (apparently) toward Bright Star or something functionally similar. This opens up a space for TC, but he doesn’t do much with it; his playing is an important part of this Dark Star but, although he has complained that Garcia didn’t give him enough room, he doesn’t seem to want to be a lead player.

At 16:38, Garcia starts playing a circular passage that seems to be heading for one of the familiar peak moments, and by 17:01 he sounds like he’s heading for Bright Star; instead, he winds up playing around the verse melody, until the latter bursts forth in earnest at 17:26. This serves for a denouement, as they soon head for the verse.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this Dark Star is that it’s so different from the night before, as they executed that one so successfully, but there is no attempt to replicate the results of the 27th. Instead, we get a rendition that has a markedly different feel—this feels brooding and deliberate, and while the playing is confident and intense, they avoid any dramatic peaks tonight. There are lots of interesting things happening, and it seems that we’ve entered a new era—not in the sense that we now know what to expect, but rather that the scope of our expectations has greatly expanded. It feels like faint praise to say that this is one of the best versions they have yet played, as the leap forward on the 27th makes that the only version fit for comparison, so I will just note that this is a really good one!


What was said
:

Friday, April 2, 2021

42. 1969-02-27



Live/Dead Fillmore West 23:07 (~21:52 actual)
Main theme at 5:00.
First verse at 6:03.
Sputnik at 11:16.
Verse melody at 13:10.
Bright Star at 20:08.
Falling Star at 20:40.
Main theme at 20:48.
Second verse at 21:25.
Goes into St. Stephen.


The Live/Dead recording begins with the tail end of Mountains of the Moon, with Dark Star coming in around 1:15, give or take a few seconds (as MOTM turns to Dark Star intro noodling, which turns into the intro proper at 1:19--or a couple seconds prior, as the first time through the opening lick is apparently counted as part of the noodling, since they play it three times instead of the customary two). The recording begins a few seconds before Garcia returns with the electric guitar, and the band starts heading toward Dark Star.

We have a great mix from the multitracks here, with Weir in particular more clear and present than usual without being overbearing. Garcia hangs back until the two minute mark, and when he comes in his line is clear and confident and, like much in this rendition, it sounds almost like a modular lick or a worked out part. It is impossible to listen to this with innocent ears as, like many Deadheads, there is a part of my brain that has entirely been rewritten by this version of Dark Star. Nevertheless, it strikes me that the playing here is notably confident and lyrical right from the beginning. Garcia’s opening salvo sounds like it is already pushing toward a peak moment, yet at the same time it is measured and does not discharge the song’s energy prematurely. Lesh is almost in the pocket here (for him!), playing low and authoritative lines that keep the song anchored and the energy controlled. With Weir so high in the mix, it is remarkable to hear how confident and creative his lines are, at times butting up against the lead guitar and challenging, at others providing a soft and bouncy cushion for Garcia’s more speculative lines.

Lesh and Weir seem particularly consonant, building the framework of the song and creating dramatic openings for Garcia. From 2:35 until 2:41, when Jerry lays out for a few moments, we can hear how closely the other two string players are working in tandem; Jerry then returns with some volume knob swells. He has the bridge pickup engaged now, and his whimsically hazy, vaguely Eastern lines beginning at 2:47 threaten to break things open, but he broadly hints at the main theme a few times, as if to remind everyone that they have not yet earned a peak. And indeed, the group dynamic throughout this opening section is focused and consistent; this is no doubt abetted by the presence of solid drumming, at first discreet but increasingly pronounced, as Kreutzmann’s drums play a larger role in this rendition than we have heard heretofore.

By 3:50 the intensity has been raised a notch or two, but even amidst this there is a remarkable little dynamic valley at about 4:25. Coming out of this, listen to how Weir mirrors Garcia; by moving into a higher register, he simultaneously generates excitement and preserves the sense of lightness and mobility that makes us feel that the band has room to go farther, harder, and deeper. At 4:55 Garcia is again subtly gesturing toward the main theme; Weir and Lesh are listening closely, as they are already playing the theme when Jerry swings into it at 5:01, and his appreciation for the cohesion of tonight’s group mind is evident in the way he gussies up the theme with some slides, ad libbed asides, and palm muting.

TC has been very low in the mix through all this, but he finally starts to come through a bit more from around 5:36. After the verse there is some very melodic playing from Phil, and then Garcia begins, at first softly, to play the tolling bell sound. Phil plays a high counterpoint to this, and then at 8:07 Garcia’s entrance to the middle jam seems to explode out of the speakers. The increased capacity of the band to create drama is profoundly evident even in the lead-up to the middle jam tonight. The cohesion of the group makes every transition seem consequent and deliberate. Following the progression of the song is like witnessing the stately (from a distance) formation of a solar system; at the same time, a closer look at the planetary level, so to speak, reveals micro-ecologies teeming with the most vibrant lifeforms. Listen at 8:15, as things are kicking into gear; Lesh drops down and slows his line slightly, which in turn leads Garcia to play more quietly at 8:21; he begins circling and revving the engine while, at 8:27, Lesh starts to climb; this leads to a small peak at 8:43, which drifts down to another little valley at 8:50. In this way, the level of alertness and mutual responsiveness among the band members makes for a trajectory that is, in detail, strikingly mobile and articulated, while at the same time giving one the sense that it is all headed somewhere, when looked at from a wider angle.

Shortly after the 9 minute mark, the band decides that we’ve had enough excitement for now, and it is time for a more pronounced and sustained dynamic downshift. The following segment is almost like a negative photographic image of the previous couple of minutes, as here and there miniature, understated peaks poke their heads above the clouds, so that we’ve gone from a section of high intensity with little valleys to a more subdued section with small crescendoes. The upshot of all this is that the band is playing with such sensitivity and sophistication that not only are they effectively employing dynamics, but they are leavening them with micro-dynamics that keep the whole thing just off the boil while still providing plenty of drama.

At 10:29 Garcia advances the proposition that things need to get spacier, and the band heads toward Sputnik. The first half of Sputnik ratchets toward a point of angry intensity from which the second half recedes. Garcia switches on his post-Sputnik effect and goes right into the verse melody; Lesh takes it to the customary E minor, but Jerry stays on the 5th, which reduces the impact of the shift to minor, which proves to be a brief interlude tonight. But Garcia stays with the guitar effect, and by about 14:20 the band has gone into space, in one of the weirdest passages they have played thus far in their career. This does not last long, regrettably; Garcia and Kreutzmann seem to simultaneously have the same idea, laying out a groove that will lead the band back to less recondite territory. They start to take it back up, and at 15:49 Garcia is calling for Bright Star, but giving the rest of the band time to build up to it.

Now they all seem to be heading in the same direction, and this section features some of the most effective playing from TC that we’ve yet heard, although he is still underemphasized in the mix. But we do not yet arrive at Bright Star; again they pull back just after the 17 minute mark, repositioning themselves around Weir’s funky stabs. Beginning at 17:18 Garcia begins repeating a single note per measure, interestingly offset in the timing from the emphasis point Weir had been establishing, as if building a scaffolding for the peak to come; at 17:32, he begins to answer himself with a second, higher note at the midpoint between each measure, and then he starts to build it up again. As he fills in the intervening notes, it begins to sound like a prelude to the main theme, and it looks like the promised peak, which now seems far away indeed, may never arrive. Lesh seems to be gearing up for the denouement of a return to the theme. Instead, Garcia once again launches into the verse melody, and this time the crash to E minor is emphasized, and indeed they use it as a launching pad to regain the momentum the band had seemingly left behind at the end of the previous jam.

Remarkably, however, the band quiets down again! Finally, at around 19:30, Garcia begins a repeating figure (featuring several shifts in tone; as we've seen on previous versions, he seems to be conversing with himself in different voices) that allows the band to build behind him; I didn’t realize until they were (finally) playing Bright Star proper at 20:08 that his line was basically the Bright Star notes, stripped down. In the end, then, we get the peak that had been teased and hinted at throughout, although this would scarcely be a lesser rendition without it, and a now-rare Falling Star ensues and leads us back into the main theme and, in turn, the second verse.



When I began listening to the Dead in the 1980s, this was the only Dark Star many Deadheads had ever heard (although the song was revived in 1989), and in any case was, and probably still is, the most famous version. And, of course, it is worthy of the adulation it has received. Like most forward leaps, this doesn’t come out of nowhere, as the Dream Bowl versions represented a distinct advance over what preceded them; still, it is hard to overstate the power and glory of this rendition.


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Friday, March 26, 2021

41. 1969-02-22



112691 Vallejo 22:19
Main theme at 4:42 and 6:43.
First verse at 6:54.
Verse melody at 10:06.
Sputnik at 14:05.
Bright Star at 18:57.
Main theme at 20:15.
Second verse at 20:41.
Goes into The Other One (Cryptical Envelopment).


This is preceded by a stupendous version of Mountains of the Moon and, unusually, goes into The Other One. The little jam after MOTM is a bit longer this time. Dark Star seems maybe a tad slower than usual, it has a stately feel to it. Garcia’s opening lead gradually intensifies into an authoritative groove, and TC seems a little more textural in the early going, as opposed to the noodly swirling he often purveys. This results in a relatively thicker sound, and things come to a sort of miasmic head at around 2:12—2:20 where everything seems to condense for a little while. The cohesiveness of the day before is in evidence as the band again sounds very much together, able to converge and bring things to a peak at will. An early highlight is the somewhat Sputnik-y series Garcia initiates at 3:36, which goes from descending arpeggios to double stops before bursting into a sunlit clearing at around 3:11. After the main theme a minute or so later, Garcia unleashes a wonderful little series of leads before heading to the verse, and just after the 6 minute mark the band sounds like they’re ready to explore a bit before they reel it in. At 6:30 this has become a little segment that is obviously pregnant with the main theme, which returns at 6:43 and quickly goes to the verse. They’ve taken their time with all this, but it all feels preparatory; as good as it is, the main effect is an adumbration of possibilities, as they seem a little restrained throughout the introductory part. Weir follows the verse with a bright, bouncing series of double-stopped lines in his usual inimitable fashion, and Garcia plays what sounds like a variation on the 1968 lick out of the verse at 8:13, and then launches into a lead that picks up in the same vein as it was left before the verse. When he turns up the heat a little at about 9:27, the others are in lockstep with him, and Garcia takes the power fed back to him and leads them to an emphatic statement of the verse melody. This keeps things simmering, as it seems like there are potencies here that are at the ready, but have not yet been tapped. After the verse interlude the band’s intensity has increased, but in a rather controlled, incremental way, as Garcia plays repetitious figures and then sets off on an ascending run at 10:57 which seems to point the way to a freer space just ahead. At 11:14 he is toying with the main theme but, perhaps realizing that it is early yet, he sets off for other climes. Garcia’s rolling lines from around 11:37, and particularly at 11:54, sound like something rehearsed or familiar, yet I don’t think we’ve heard it before, and he quickly moves on to other things. It’s probably happened very gradually, but Weir sounds utterly at home here…his playing is vital and creative, and he manages to vary his parts to suit the required intensities of the moment without ever sounding forced or out of place. This may be the biggest factor in the way that Dark Star sounds so cohesively mobile at this point; again, though, there is the sense that it has not yet gone everywhere it is capable, just now, of going. At 12:39 Garcia sounds like he’s going to head toward Sputnik, and again the band picks up on it immediately. But instead of Sputnik, there is a sparkling, twinkling peak, and it’s just a beautiful moment. The band then takes it down, and Jerry takes another run in the general direction of Sputnik, which finally comes in for real at 14:05. Garcia goes to the tolling bell sound at the tail end of Sputnik, and then Lesh suddenly sounds like he means business, firing off some darkly melodic runs as Garcia puts on the weird post-Sputnik effect, and we are almost in a little Space interlude. Garcia plays a melody with this that sounds like what he does on Live/Dead, but Lesh keeps thing spacy and Jerry starts playing with his volume knob. Immediately after, the counterpoint between Lesh and Garcia is magnificent, as Weir wisely keeps things simple with a binding chordal part in the middle of it all, until he begins to syncopate a little—this sets Jerry off, as the band goes into a variation of the main theme with offset rhythms that is one of the most sophisticated things we have heard in a Dark Star, if somewhat brief. This seems like it’s heading toward a Bright Star, which is one way to get everyone back on the straight and narrow without a mishap, and that is exactly what happens at 18:57, although the Bright Star theme is only briefly stated. And, soon enough, we have arrived at the verse.


The highlight tonight is, I think, the pre-Sputnik section.


The name of the Dark Star game, these nights in Vallejo, is cohesion and controlled experimentation. There is intensity here, but not in the form of explosive peaks; the band sounds very much in control of things and capable of peaking, should they choose, but they forgo such theatrics and keep things simmering; or, perhaps its more accurate to say that when the intensity increases it does so continuously, rather than breaking out as a sudden cloudburst. In this sense there is still something propaedeutic about these Dark Stars, yet they are very satisfying in their own right, and even exciting insofar as they show us a band and a song that now seem capable of feats that would not have been possible months, or even weeks, before. If the band was wiped out in a bus crash after the Vallejo shows, I think that the discerning listener may have surmised that the world had been deprived of future Dark Stars that would have reached new heights, and feel this as a loss for humanity. Fortunately, no such thing happened; my point, however, is that there is both palpable development here, and at the same time attainment, as the Dream Bowl both points to what is yet to happen, while at the same time displaying a power of execution that had not hitherto been reached.


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Friday, March 19, 2021

40. 1969-02-21



111780 Vallejo 20:38
Main theme at 6:44.
First verse at 7:34.
Verse melody at 13:11.
Sputnik at 14:14.
Bright Star at 18:12.
Main theme at 18:35.
Second verse at 19:05.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Garcia begins right away with a serious lead, playing vigorous trebly lines and hitting some variations on Bright Star and the main theme. There’s a nice TC moment from 3:00 to around 3:09 where he comes bubbling up in a way that nicely buoys Garcia’s lead. The latter is again using repetition to good effect here. At 5:05 things almost come to a halt as the band pauses to take stock of the situation. When they come back they are hinting at a minor key before things suddenly pick up again, but a little weirder this time. They finally arrive at the verse at 7:34, which makes this the longest intro to date (1-24 was at 7:30). Garcia comes out quietly after the verse, neither playing the 68 lick nor bell tolling, but by 9:30 he’s ready to take things up a notch. This time Weir is pushing right behind him, bolstering Garcia’s lead much like TC did earlier. Beginning at 10:41 Garcia plays a repetitive line that sends the band into a weird little groove; the extent to which they all seem to be listening to each other is remarkable here. This descends into quietness again; everyone seems concerned with dynamics this time out. Weir and Lesh play a slow groove as Garcia spins out some quietly stinging lines. After the verse melody, it seems like things are heading for a peak as Garcia plays a repetitive ascending lick (which I think we’ve heard before) but instead they go to Sputnik. Garcia again puts on the post-Sputnik effect, and this time he plays around with it for a little while as things pick up steam again briefly, before again simmering down and getting weird. This culminates in Garcia’s statement of the main theme in his lead at about 16:59. This functions almost like Bright Star insofar as it seems about to bring the band to a peak, but this does not happen; they circle around some more, and suddenly it seems like a Bright Star is absolutely necessary. That, of course, doesn’t mean it’s coming, but this time they take the obvious course and unleash Bright Star at 18:12. But, yet again, the band pulls back from the peak rather quickly!

This may be the most sophisticated Dark Star to date. It feels truly collaborative, as the band interacts closely throughout. In its dynamic mobility, it almost seems above such vulgarities as an ensemble peak of any real duration, but it keeps the listener on her toes all the more for that. This proves to be an engaging, even gripping, rendition.


What was said:

Friday, March 12, 2021

39. 1969-02-15



2175 Philadelphia 23:00 (actually 22:00)
Main theme at 3:54.

First verse at 4:53.
Verse melody at 12:40.
Sputnik at 16:18.
Bright Star at 19:37.
Second verse at 21:25.
Goes into St. Stephen.
Main theme at 20:40.



This is the second one we have that emerges from “Mountains of the Moon.” This has a nice jam in between, although once Garcia switches to electric it moves almost immediately to “Dark Star.” This one feels lighter than the day before. Garcia plays some of his tolling bell licks in the beginning, before launching into a hazy lead. After a repetitive series of ascending notes anchored by a repeated low tone that sounds like it’s heading for the main theme, Garcia first temporizes with another lead and some pseudo-Sputnik licks. After the verse, he goes back to the bell tone very briefly, but maybe he feels like he’s done it already since he quickly moves on. Weir and Lesh play it pretty close to the vest right after the verse, providing a light cushion for Jerry’s ruminations. Things almost come to a stop at 7:27, but the band relaunches right away with a weirder ensemble vibe, as Lesh in particular starts to wander a bit more. At about 8:53 TC and Weir step out front for a spell, as Garcia lays out. The playing here is quite textural, and no one seems to be advancing things much until Weir starts playing single notes at around 10:56, and the band slides into some evil circus music with TC swirling away. Weir goes back to comping, then back to a sort of lead at 11:50 or so. We can finally hear Garcia again at 12:08 but he’s hanging way back. Finally he breaks back in with the verse melody at 12:40. For some reason this doesn’t crash into the e minor but unwinds with some lead guitar with Lesh playing some fuzzy weird tones. Things shift a bit at the 15 minute mark with a mild increase of intensity, which is nevertheless short-lived. At around 16 minutes Garcia switches to the bridge pickup and begins gearing up for the coming Sputnik. Garcia again comes out of the Sputnik with a weird effect on his guitar, and he keeps it going a little bit longer this time, going back into a roll pattern. There is a scratcher or something scratching away in the left channel as Jerry kicks back into a more ordinary guitar sound and spins out more lead lines. The band hits a nice little bounce shortly after 19 minutes which takes them into Bright Star. This issues forth into a repetitive interlude that serves as a little windup for the main theme, which Garcia attacks with gusto.


There are nice moments here, but this one feels a bit like they are treading water for much of it. It burbles along without anything too momentous happening at any point.


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Friday, March 5, 2021

38. 1969-02-14



141006 Philadelphia 19:03.
Main theme at 4:23.
First verse at 5:38.
Verse melody at 9:37.
Sputnik at 11:36.
Bright Star at 15:21.
Main theme at 16:44.
Second verse at 17:22.

Goes into St. Stephen.


The intro is cut. This has a pretty slow tempo [it seems that this source runs slow!], and the stretch it out more than they have been doing recently. Garcia plays a unique chiming drone around 3:52 that touches on Sputnik before heading into the main theme. Instead of going to the verse, Weir starts playing a high chime as Garcia pokes around on the bass notes, and then it sort of abruptly goes to the verse. At the conclusion of the first verse, Garcia again plays tolling bell tones rather than the 1968 lick. At around 7:50 he gets a striking tone on the bass notes, and begins a hazy ascent to the heavens that culminates around 8:20 or so with some repeated higher figures, then begins to wind its way upward some more until it discharges into a high sustained note at 9:31, before heading into the verse melody. The E minor section after the verse melody is rather dark and dramatic this time. Garcia is playing long, fluid lines throughout this jam, and dipping into little pockets of repetition along the way, which give the band a chance to kick up behind him. The Sputnik appears rather abruptly at 11:36, and again Garcia plays with that distinct trebly, distorted tone at the end of it; as usual, this doesn’t last very long. There is a beautiful passage of distorted guitar, and then Bright Star seems to appear out of nowhere, before it turns into a kind of bluesy variation of the main theme which builds to a little peak at around 16:30.


This one is a little slower, and the overall effect is dark and sort of menacing at times. The themes sort of ooze to the surface rather than appearing in a discernible sequence. The result is aesthetically quite satisfying, as if we are being shown a particular tract of psychic space that Dark Star has thrown open to us.


What was said:

Friday, February 26, 2021

37. 1969-02-12



6285 Fillmore East 4:59 (cut)
Bright Star at 0:00.
Main theme at 2:02 and 3:03.
Second verse at 3:23.

Goes into St. Stephen.


This is a fragment only, presumably cutting in late in the between verse jam, but what’s here is pretty nice. It is kind of tantalizing, but there’s not much to go on.




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36. 1969-02-11



Youtube Fillmore East 12:29
Comes out of Mountains of the Moon.

Main theme at 1:22, 2:11 and 2:35.

First verse at 3:12.
Verse melody at 6:11.
Sputnik at 7:20.
Bright Star at 8:59.
Main theme at 9:36 and 10:43.
Second verse at 10:57.


The Dead were opening for Janis Joplin, and perhaps trying to be concise. Nevertheless, the pace is relatively deliberate this time. This is the first time that Dark Star comes out of Mountains of the Moon, with a nice little transition in between. Garcia keeps slipping in and out of the main theme during the ~3 minute intro. Garcia’s entry after the verse, after a short interlude with tolling bell sound, is striking. Here he eschews the 1968 lick, and he sounds rather fuzzy on the low notes. At some point here TC enters the mix. There’s a nice little duet between Garcia and Lesh starting around 5:40. This time Weir seems to initiate the Sputnik while Garcia is perhaps hinting at it. Again Garcia plays with a distinctive effect after the Sputnik, though again not for long. Bright Star seems to come out of nowhere this time, without much of a build-up, and it goes right into the main theme. The band gets a round of applause when Garcia goes into the second verse.

This sounds very together but there’s really nothing new or particularly noteworthy going on.


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Friday, February 19, 2021

35. 1969-02-07



137392 Pittsburgh, PA 14:07


Begins with an emcee saying he wants to thank the crowd “for all the solar system people,” which I got a kick out of (was that the name of a production company? otherwise, it seems kind of presumptuous! [pbuzby: Most depressed sounding emcee in history. "Solar System Light and Power Company" produced this show])

Main theme at 2:13 and 3:24.
First verse at 4:30.
Verse melody at 7:50.
Sputnik at 9:07.
Bright Star at 11:01.
Main Theme at 11:55.
Second verse at 12:34.
Goes into St. Stephen.


TC seems a little more at home at this point, I think…and we can hear him, which is always nice. Garcia sounds loaded and ready, he goes to the main theme rather quickly but then takes off again for a while. He briefly plays a wrong note (a major 7, I think) at 2:28 before bending up to the right one. I am sure he sometimes does this entirely by accident, but it sounds in a way fitting here, and I wonder if sometimes he is trying to push against the bars of tonality a little and taking a chance on purpose. This is far from unusual over the years, and I might even venture to say he plays more clams than most similarly accomplished players, although when I say that I also immediately recall that there is no one I am aware of whose work has been so extensively documented, so he may not stand out in that regard after all. In any case, listen to the continuously fluid outpouring of notes from 6:49 to 7:43; it doesn’t seem like the work of a guy who will accidentally land on the major 7th. With the verse melody in between, this passage is offset by Garcia’s increasingly choppy approach from 8:15 until the Sputnik at 9:07. Listen to how Lesh drones for the first part of the Sputnik, and then starts mixing it up; coming out of this section Garcia adopts a guitar sound we’ll hear again on the 27th (and I can’t swear we haven’t heard it before). The Bright Star at 11:01 begins very delicately, and although it builds, it’s not an occasion for the band to peak this time.

This one is pretty but seems sort of uneventful. It’s hard not to see all these February Dark Stars as stops along the way to 2-27 (and, to a lesser extent, 2-21 and 2-22, although saying that sort of vitiates the point), but of course they couldn’t have been thinking of it this way. But they are gathering ideas and building their capabilities, and this will come to fruition in a big way later in the month.




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Friday, February 12, 2021

34. 1969-02-06

 

137394 St. Louis 14:02 (cut at 8:49 of unknown duration)

Main theme at 2:39.
Main theme at 4:10.
First verse at 4:32.
Verse melody at 8:08.
Sputnik at 9:08.
Bright Star at 11:06.
Falling Star at 11:34.
Main theme at 11:52.
Second verse at 12:33.
Goes into St. Stephen.

Again TC seems reasonably audible, until Garcia comes in…it’s a good mix overall, though. Garcia is in fine form from the outset, and from about 3:14 he plays some of his best guitar, fluid and dynamic, before starting a little repeating motif at 3:38 that ends up at a little peak which he takes advantage of by plowing into the main theme. After the verse, Garcia states the 1968 outro briefly, and rather quietly, and the band plays in a subdued manner for a good couple minutes after the verse. Jerry is again using different voices and pickup positions to good effect; there is a cut at 8:49 that doesn’t seem like it is probably too long, but it’s hard to tell for sure (and note that my fellows seem to think it more significant than I did--it seems to me like they may have built it up pretty quickly, but there is a shift in intensity at the cut). At 10:35 Garcia starts toying with Bright Star, and the band hits a peak around the 11 minute mark before he finally breaks into it in earnest. This leads to the return of Falling Star, last heard (or at least last documented) in the fall of ’68. This is a kind of low-key version, and much of it is pretty mellow, even though it gets off to a typically bold start. If the cut is brief, then this is also another pretty short version, although to me it didn’t seem rushed the way the last one did. These are all pretty great to one extent or another, it bears repeating.


What was said:

Friday, February 5, 2021

33. 1969-02-05



8993 Kansas City, KS 11:40Intro is cut.
Main theme at 1:36.
First verse at 2:12.
Verse melody at 7:22.
Bright Star at 8:36.
Main theme at 9:28.
Second verse at 10:07.
Goes into St. Stephen.

This cuts in on an audible TC playing the ROR; however, Garcia is extremely loud here, and he quickly drowns out TC when he comes in. At 1:15, Garcia begins a sequence that has a Sputnik feel, and I was almost tempted to call it a Sputnik, but it’s only Jerry’s part, and it’s pretty brief. I’m not sure what the circumstances were here, but the band seems almost to be in a hurry, as this moves to the theme and the verse very quickly. After the verse Jerry again takes it out with the 1968 lick, and I sort of regret not naming it and marking it down when it happens, as it is more common than I realized. Garcia seems to be on the bridge pickup in the early going, as he swoops from brassy bass string licks to piercing high notes, and after the verse everything still seems to be moving rather quickly. At about 4:58 Garcia drops out and TC, again distinctly audible in the absence of Jerry’s loud guitar, takes the lead for a while. It’s possible Jerry broke a string, or else he just wants to give TC space for a change; in any case, the band rises to the occasion, and this lasts until, at 7:03, Garcia comes in with some Sputnik licks and a little chording, which he quickly abandons in favor of the verse melody section. At 7:56 Garcia plays a lead melody which we will hear again but I don’t think we’ve heard before, and which will feature in the famous 1969-02-27 Dark Star; I’m not sure if we should name this, or how often it will happen. It’s kind of a variant of Bright Star, in any case, which Garcia adumbrates left and right until finally it breaks out at 8:36, which basically shows how arbitrary some of these timings from the list up top are getting to be.
This feels rushed in a way, although not necessarily in the details of the playing in any given section, but just the overall trajectory. They don’t really do anything new here, with the exception (I think) of Jerry’s lead from 7:56. This is far from a bad version, and I would hesitate to call any Dark Star from this period mediocre, even, but neither does it stand out much.




What was said:

Friday, January 29, 2021

32. 1969-02-04



7294 Omaha, NE 13:13

Main theme at 1:54, 2:33 and 3:06.
First verse at 3:38.
Verse melody at 7:17.
Sputnik at 7:53.
Bright Star at 10:07.
Main theme at 11:05.
Second verse at 11:45.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Weir seems a little louder than usual this time, which gives us a chance to examine his contributions a little more closely. There’s a nice bit from about 1:25 where all the instrumentalists are weaving together in a way that is quite busy but very euphonious, and what strikes me is how rapidly sections like this can come on, as the band is very mobile and light on their feet at this point. At 1:34 Garcia starts playing some licks that will appear again in future renditions, but for which we have no name. The first time the band hits the main theme, they play it for about 30 seconds and then Garcia spins off into something else; then they resume it at 2:33, and this time Garcia begins varying the theme itself before again taking off again; he then returns to the theme a third time before the verse. Garcia again follows the verse with the familiar lick from 1968. There follows a nice bit where Jerry is playing on the bass strings, and Weir’s chiming rhythm part is floating above him. For a good stretch Weir seems to be playing in a higher register than usual, although it’s possible he has been doing this more than I have noticed, as his guitar is notably audible and distinct on this recording. After the Sputnik, beginning at around 9:28, Weir joins Lesh, who has been flashing the main theme, in a percussive jam which gives this section a unique flavor, and this carries over into the bouncy Bright Star that follows. At 10:53 Garcia starts what will soon be indisputably the main theme; I’ve logged it as 11:05 above, but at times it’s ambiguous where the theme begins or ends, as their treatment of it is increasingly loose and discursive at the edges.

This feels like a fragment; at this point, they can really cram a 13 minute Dark Star full of ideas, and this one feels like it never fully develops into what it wants to be. Nevertheless, Dark Star is consistently engaging, and this is no exception.


What was said

Friday, January 22, 2021

31: 1969-02-02



123283 Minneapolis 15:38
Main theme at 2:03 and 3:10.
First verse at 4:44.
Verse melody at 9:05.
Sputnik at 10:06.
Bright Star (sort of) at 12:35.
Main theme at 13:02.
Second verse at 14:09.
Goes into St. Stephen.


Garcia again has a very bright tone and a pretty aggressive approach. Starting at :48 he ends a sequence of runs with a note that he holds for 16 seconds, letting it feed back. Weir and Lesh start the main theme at 2:01, and Garcia plays around with it a little. At 2:38 Garcia and Weir drop out briefly, and Lesh plays some legato lines before Garcia comes in and builds back up to the main theme. Instead of going to the verse they play around some more after this, and a nice crescendo is reached with a sort-of Bright Star theme at 4:02. At 4:13 Garcia drops the verse melody in (unofficially, as it were, as they don’t go to the E minor). After the verse, Garcia plays, once, the familiar verse outro from 1968. There’s an interesting bit at 6:09 where Garcia hangs on the minor third (C), before sliding up to the major third at 6:18 (C#, which is more usual here since Dark Star is most often based on A Mixolydian). At 7:09 Garcia plays a repeated figure on the bass strings that goes on for about 20 seconds before it starts spiraling upward; at 7:24 Weir starts trickling in with a co-lead, then at 7:40 he drops out as Garcia shoots up into a higher register. Things get pleasingly strange at 8:17 when everything grinds almost ot a halt, and then Garcia starts playing a repeated A that is like a bell tolling while Lesh plays lead for a while. The tension is discharged at 9:05 when Garcia plays the verse melody, this time with the familiar E minor payoff. They then build to a rousing crescendo, and you’d be forgiven for expecting Bright Star at 9:55, but instead they head into a Sputnik. TC seems to be on top of this, or maybe even an instigator, although it’s hard to tell as he is very low in the mix here. At 12:22 Lesh and Garcia are inverted for a moment, with the bass soaring above the guitar, and then at 12:35 there is a passage that’s about halfway between the main theme and Bright Star, and the main theme likewise arrives in a somewhat distorted form at 13:02 before settling in at 13:13. After this they start chugging away at the verse. But instead Garcia starts playing some chiming harmonics, very gently and beautifully, although it cannot be said that everyone is perfectly in tune at this point.


This is a fantastic rendition, and it seems to me to cover a lot of untrodden ground, although I suppose that is not entirely unusual at this point (and, as you will see, we don't have consensus about this!).




What was said:

Friday, January 15, 2021

30. 1969-01-26

109642 Avalon 9:38 (cut in the middle)

Main theme at 2:10.
Main theme at 3:15.
First verse at 4:03.
Second verse at 8:10.
Goes into St. Stephen.


The mix is more balanced this time, with TC more audible than usual, but not overbearing. Although he begins with the ROR, he’s not as wedded to it as Pigpen was, and again here he moves on from it after a few times through. Garcia comes out of the gate with some caffeinated, trebly lead work, and the band is very brisk and on top of the beat. Note from around 2:50, and again at 6:55 or so, how Weir mirrors and supports Garcia’s lead, as his playing continues to grow more imaginative and flexible, and this expands Dark Star’s horizon of possibilities dramatically. There is a nice peak at around 7:15, after a nimble build-up by Garcia, and note how from about 7:23 Garcia, Lesh, Weir and TC are all locked in together as they weave their way to another little peak, with some pleasingly off-key notes from Garcia to cap it off. There is a cut just before the second verse, but it seems like they were headed toward the verse already when it cuts. This one is very short, and probably not all that noteworthy overall, although there are certainly points of interest.


What was said:

Reference

Lexicon: Themes and Modular Jams

Here is a key to some of the terminology we will be using in our exploration of Dark Star. There are several themes that reappear in various...