Tag: grateful dead

  • Cornell ’77 Revisited: Holy Grail of Grateful Dead Shows Makes Debut at The Cap; Larry Reichman Discusses New Photo Book

    5/8/77 – Grateful Dead’s most talked about and traded show from Barton Hall at Cornell University,  has been mastered from the Betty Board tapes and commercially released along with other May 1977 Dead shows. The hype, excitement, and anticipation over this release since its announcement earlier this year has been turned over into just as much appreciation for the release in its various formats.

    Monday, May 8, 2017 marked the 40th anniversary of the legendary Cornell Barton Hall show and in Tompkins County it was declared as “Grateful Dead Day” by way of proclamation. It was a particularly special day for the Big Red Deadheads out there with a special tribute concert by the Cornell Chimes, performing a handful of arrangements of Dead tunes. Rhino Entertainment, the Grateful Dead’s record label, hosted two special events with one at the State Theatre featuring Terrapin Flyer and a second at the Capitol Theatre where the newly released 5/8/77 show debuted in full concert sound for a rather fun listening party.

    grateful dead cornellThe Grateful Dead’s Barton Hall show gained notoriety in part from the fairly quick circulation of the soundboard recording of the show among traders, which itself is of good quality with some minor flaws. In comparison, the new official release is immaculate and among the best of quality mastered commercial Grateful Dead releases. Although there was no band on stage at the Capitol Theatre, hearing the freshly realesed 5/8/77 show through the Cap’s PA system in full concert sound captured the essence of being at a live show – so much so that folks were dancing around the floor.

    While revisiting 5/8/77 at the Cap reminiscers were treated to a montage of photos from the show itself, many unseen before, projected on the theatre walls. Those photos were taken by then Cornell freshman Larry Reichman who is working on releasing a complete book featuring many more images from Barton Hall that day from setup through the concert. He was there at the Cap to promote it (the black and white photos shown within the photos in this article are by Reichman). He is currently running a Kickstarter campaign which ends on May 24 and can be found here. NYS Music caught up with Reichman at the Cap to chat about the book and his Barton Hall experience in an interview that was also broadcast on WVBR-FM in Ithaca.

    Steve Malinski: Can you tell us about your background in photography?

    Larry Reichman: I got into black and white photography when I was a high school student down in New York and learned to develop negatives and prints the old fashioned way and when I got to Cornell, I started working for a newspaper and started taking photos of events on campus – most of the concerts they had on campus that year – and jumping ahead to this show I had gotten a pass from the Cornell Concert Commission to be in [Barton Hall] the whole day. So, I took photos of the setup and the whole show.

    SM: What prompted you to shoot the Barton Hall show?

    LR: Well, I was a big Dead fan so there was no way that I would not go to the show. I had a press pass for most of the shows that year and I could have done that, but a friend of mine was a volunteer for the Cornell Concert commission and suggested I talk to someone there. While I had no special arrangement with the Concert Commission, I gave them a few photos of the show which are also now part of the Cornell University Archives.

    SM: Can you take us through the course of your day at the Barton Hall show, and interesting things that you saw?

    LR: I didn’t really know what to expect. So I was just in the Hall and as you know, it’s a big empty hall. Not a barn, but a big open space. They had to literally build the stage and lighting. There were these super trooper spotlights going in. As things were loaded in I was just wandering around taking photos. Probably the most memorable moment was (since I had a lot of time to kill earlier in the day) while I was wandering around behind the stage I looked up and the band was about four feet above me on stage. Because I was kind of shy I didn’t say hi to the band but nodded to Jerry and was on my way. The show of course was memorable. I got to claim a spot right in front of the stage and shoot from there.

    SM: And you were only a freshman at Cornell doing all this?

    LR: I was, 18 years old. I had seen them a few times before that and it was awesome to hear that they were coming to Cornell and I didn’t have to go far to see them.

    SM: You’re working on a new photo book with many never before seen photos of the Barton Hall show, which you are raising funds for through Kickstarter. Can you tell us about the book?

    LR: Again, I was there the whole day for setup, soundcheck and the whole show. So what I’m putting together is a really good quality book, about 80-pages long. My goal is to have something special, a really good quality coffee table kind of book printed in the US. There will be three chapters. First chapter is the setup, and in fact the announcer of that show, Bob, is here tonight and I happen to have a photo of him in the book. Then the next chapters will be First Set and Second Set. First set, for the photo buffs out there, I shot with a 50mm lens, so it’s a bit more of a wide angle. For the second set I had a telephoto lens which allowed me to zoom in a bit more. Because of slower shutter speeds and other technical parameters it allowed me to capture some movement on stage. The book will have a variety of shots and won’t just be picture after picture. It will be an artistic layout.

    SM: And you’re running a Kickstarter to get this going?

    LR: Yes, the book is laid out and ready to go but I need help to print it. So I’m running a Kickstarter to raise the money for the printing. People can pledge to support it with various rewards, including a pre-order of the book and individual photos from the show.

    Editors note: as of the publication of this article, the Kickstarter campaign has been fully funded.

    SM: You mentioned that you were also involved with WVBR back around that time as well?

    LR: Yeah, I signed up to volunteer there my first week at Cornell back in 1976. I was just really interested in all things music. I learned how to splice tape and make commercials. I had a show on the AM band which was literally broadcast through the AC electric system on the West Campus of Cornell. I’d go there on Saturday nights and spin records, played a lot of Dead. Then the next year I did a bit of engineering, particularly for the news shows. Also, the newspaper I was working for was downstairs in the building. I don’t recall the name but it was a weekly startup. I think that’s how I learned about the paper from going to WVBR and saw the paper downstairs. I decided to check it out and that’s where I developed all of these photos. It was all off-campus in Collegetown.

  • The Historical and Religious Origins of Shakedown Street

    When roaming the lots before or after a Phish show, everyone is tempted to, or did, pick something up for themselves as a sort of keepsake or memento of that show. Buying that shirt, sticker, poster, glass piece or whatever happened to catch your eye at that one moment – that item was something that you got to remember the show by, something to remember that band or to say that you had been there. We, the Phish fans of the 80’s, 90’s and 00’s were not the first to do this. Most would certainly (and safely) say that the Grateful Dead had the first lots of this nature, with Shakedown Street.

    However, the Grateful Dead had a concept started around them that created a way to mark where you had been, coupled with a small scale barter/market economy. I knew it had to go further back, this ritual of buying things to show you had been somewhere. I have always considered that to be one of the first and foremost reasons you buy a souvenir at a concert – to show people that you have been somewhere and that you have traveled great distances (great being a relative term) to see a band/act you care about.

    shakedown street

    All these items contained in this book that were sold in the lots and at shows and online, these are the items people bought to show that they had been at a certain venue, a certain tour or a certain show. Mainly, it was to show that they loved the band Phish and purchasing advertisement was necessary to spread this happy word. While the logo was the most recognizable, having those shirts with the John Deere Antelope, Piper/Pepsi or IBM/YEM combination made those who knew what the shirt was all about nod their head and you knew you could connect with someone on that level without even saying anything.

    The connections that were made varied in intensity, but at least a connection was there that existed outside, inside, and alongside the band. These are the connections that go back hundreds and probably over a couple thousand years through the annals of history, specifically, religious history. While this was not something I thought was at the root of what was shakin’ on Shakedown Street, it immediately made great sense simply based on going to concerts. Whether it was migrating to them in loose groups or alone and following with such fervency and devotion, it would be passé to not tie Phish shows and the overall experience to that of a religious pilgrimage. In fact, the early presence of souvenirs was common, serving as an effort to show where you had been in Christianity and Buddhism as well as other religious beliefs. In religion, we find the root of what many have taken as a basic fundamental in going to concerts and seeing bands – the root of the concert souvenir.

    shakedown street

    Live music is in many ways a religion. Just as with the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist in the Catholic Church, the live music experience is one in the same. For example, before services you get dressed up, more or less, and drive to the place of worship (the venue) for your hour or two where you become enlightened and expect to feel whole again. This venue has a stage (altar) at one end and a view so that it might be seen by all. New Orleans’ own Tipitina’s resembles a church from the moment you walk in and see a face in the stained glass above the stage – clearly a God of some sort to whom this house was erected. This is not of blasphemy but just idolization of those who the utmost respect is given to for the effort put into such a craft. You mingle beforehand, seeing people and friends you have come to know, and enjoy the company of others before heading inside and taking your seat. Just as with religion, music invites everyone, although sometimes there are limits on who can participate in these rituals (age limits, akin to becoming a full member of the community) but, nonetheless, you become part of the community every time. Even if you are on the road and traveling, you typically find a friendly face to welcome you to the center of worship.

    As the band plays, or the preacher speaks, the Liturgy of the Word takes place. The fan, the follower of the words is the Liturgy of the Eucharist: their body changes, their blood changes, and they become something new, and whole again, every time. The fervent fans feel this the most and the more you grow, the more you attend; likewise, the more you live it, the more you love it, and vice versa. You change every time you allow the music and the words to do so. Religion has music strewn throughout it while music has religion embedded in its existence.

    phish shakedown street

    While reading this, you will notice that it is entirely a historical perspective of pilgrimages throughout history with some alluding to the present. This is simply drawn from my view of the history that I researched for this article as well as the time spent on tour and at various festivals over the past decade. There are similarities to be drawn and the purpose of this reading is to use it as a window to the state of our once and future musical pilgrimages. Also, the instances, locations, and examples used are simply in the spirit of brevity as this topic could be served with an even greater deal of focus, as seen in the books that were used to research this topic. Only select examples are used in order to provide you with a way of tying the past and present together by using specific instances and areas of focus while giving a broad overview of the nature of pilgrimages, votives, mementos, and the religious roots of what we have come to know simply as ‘touring.’

    Live Music and the relationship with Religion through pilgrimages, votives, missionary and revival preaching, and cultural phenomenon.

    In examining the major world religions, the common element that is unequivocal and unarguable is the presence of a form of pilgrimage. When conducting a pilgrimage, those from all religious walks of life, from the common lay person to the holy man and woman, are embarking on a journey of spiritual enlightenment, redemption, and worship.

    shakedown street hajj

    Islam and Hajj

    Muslims are some of the most devout religious believers in the history of civilization. Part of this devotion rests in the five pillars of the Islamic religion: belief in Allah, fasting during the month of Ramadan, giving alms to the poor, praying five times a day facing towards Mecca, and making a pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca (in present day Saudi Arabia) once in your life. The latter is typically called Hajj, which literally means ‘to set out for a place’. This is a yearly ritual performed by thousands of Muslims as a sign of spiritual reawakening and an overall religiously uplifting experience. Any Muslim who is able to make the trip, believes in Islam, has their freedom, has reached adulthood and is of a sane mind, can undertake Hajj.

    Hajj is one of the most solemn times in the life of a Muslim as it is performed alone while wearing traditional white robes and performing rituals over the course of a trip to Mecca in present day Saudi Arabia. Hajj was instituted by Abraham to serve as a focal meeting place for all believers in the One God, Allah. Thus, he made Mecca the center of the worldwide Islamic movement. The process of the journey prepares the individual spiritually and mentally for the once in a lifetime experience. A renewal of self occurs at this time, through prayer and meditation and circumambulation of the Ka’aba stone. The followers wear simple clothes: nothing on their feet, no perfume and hair unbrushed. Overall, there is no adornment whatsoever. The purpose of this is to bring the pilgrim closer to God and towards the ultimate purpose of Hajj, which is a spiritual bond with Islam and all its teachings, a bond that is different for each pilgrim.

    Hajj was not always like this, as it became corrupt for a time, such that one would be able to consider it ‘Mardi Gras in Mecca.’ The pilgrimage turned into an annual carnival, almost a social event that one sought to attend just to say they had been rather than to go for the intended purpose. Poets and clowns would go to boast about their tribes. Wealth was spread around so as to flaunt the haves over the have-nots. Animals were slaughtered with singing and revelry as part of the festivities. Allah and the original purpose of Hajj had all but disappeared.

    One could think of a degradation of the scene at Phish shows in recent years* populated by those who went for the scene, the drugs, and the party atmosphere, not realizing that the original purpose of the concert was the music. (*ed note: ‘recent years’ refers to 2000-2004)

    shakedown street

    Some saw this and sought to do something about it, even in the days of the Grateful Dead. Back then, when fans were getting out of control, some were not even regarded as fans by the mere fact that they came for everything but the concert, sometimes not even going in to the show.

    Such is the similarity to the era of corruption of Hajj. Steps needed to be taken by the Saudi Arabian government in the 1930’s to ensure that the original purpose and demeanor of the Hajj experience was retained and not degraded. Woodstock 1999 was a festival that was created in the spirit of carrying on the tradition of the original 1969 festival, but the spirit was not present by any means. Capitalism and greed had taken over the name Woodstock with $4 bottles of water, $10 frozen pizzas, and corners cut on facilities and overall layout. This led to the infamous riots of that Sunday night. Having been at this shame of a festival, it was apparent that something needed to change and in recent years, especially since the inception of Bonnaroo in 2002, the experience of embarking on a pilgrimage for music was centered on the music and kept in that manner. The result in recent years has been a slew of successful festivals that do not seek to impose restrictions on those who attend, nor do they detract from the original intent of the festival, – the music.

    The evolution of Islam’s Hajj

    Imagine if the scene started as it did, but the lots got so out of control, no one came for the music, just the scene, the partying, the drugs, and the community went to shit. That is what happened to the Hajj over time. With a powerful decree and governance as to how people should conduct themselves for such a religious purpose, things returned to the original intent. Now if the scene had some sort of control acted upon it to return the focus to the music, there would be a direct correlation to that of Islam and the Hajj. No control was really enforced and the occasional police presence didn’t show people that they should be there for the music. A band decree would have been that final step although it never occurred, so we just watched out for one another. This is a step that only goes so far before the majority lose the meaning that was behind the whole thing to begin with. Hiatus does seem to have some semblance of this era, but that is something that is best left to other explorations and discussions.

    Christianity and Saint Shrines

    The concept of present day pilgrimage in Christianity does have some semblance of what it once did in the early years and first millennium of the Catholic Church. Many Christians find it a pilgrimage to travel to Rome and visiting St. Peter’s Square and seeing the Pope on his balcony. Others may travel to the Holy Land for such a spiritual enlightenment, however, one wound not find this to be a requirement for full admission to a religion such as Christianity. The topic of pilgrimages has roots going further back in time with religions and belief systems such as Islam and Buddhism. Pilgrimages had an effect of providing a spiritual cleansing, absolution from sins and transgressions, forgiveness, healing of all sorts, and protection from ailments both human and otherwise. One could easily see the relation there is to going on Phish tour or any band one enjoys in earnest. When preparing for a tour, knowing the dates months in advance, a time of preparation ensues, including making plans with others, getting finances in order, making sure that clothes, gear, and necessary equipment are procured, and that a method of travel is available as well. While on a tour and in the months and weeks following, the feeling that pervades tour-goers is that of a spiritual cleansing. It is a healing process and an escape from life that healed anything that may have been broken. It’s an answer that had been found in the form of travel and music and grown from a tradition of travel and religion.

    Prior to the 1400’s and predominantly in the first millennium, relics were the key element for the pilgrimage or the site/shrine itself. Relics of a particular saint or even of Christ or Mary were quite common, even though authenticity took a leap of faith. Relics that were claimed to have existed at different points of this era in Medieval times include rope that was used to bind Christ’s hands to the whipping post; fragments of the crown of thorns; a piece of the true cross, and vials of Christ’s blood.

    Of course, all of these relics take a degree of faith to believe that they the one and true item that they say they are. One who was in the presence of a relic would need to be mindful of the religiosity of the substance. If you mocked or denied the true nature of the relic, reports say that you were inclined to have dumbness, disease, madness, and even death brought upon you. This is where cults emerged around certain items that were dedicated to these relics were born. It was thought that God might work through these particular items of religious interest, but the groups were generally condemned by the Church as going against the teachings of the Church. The papacy viewed these relics as tantamount to heresy for it was faith and faith alone that led Catholics to worship and not tangible alternatives that may distract followers from the true calling and form of worship that was taught to be within a Church’s walls.

    Statues of saints were soon built to impress his or her presence on pilgrims as well as inhabitants of remote villages where they were constructed. One example was that of St. Foy, a child martyr from the year 303 whose statue and shrine were in Auvergne in Central France. Her statue would be paraded around whenever a region was threatened. In epidemic ravaged areas, monks would walk around the statue while clashing symbols together and blowing horns as they toured the countrysides with the statue. Locals would gather in an atmosphere of extreme religious fervor expecting cures, but at the least, redeeming their faith and seemingly alleviating any emptiness that was contained within them.

    In the 9th and 10th centuries, a series of invasions by the Vikings, Arabs, and Magyars destroyed saint shrines all over Europe. Even pilgrimages to Rome became quite dangerous and there were sometimes few monasteries that were available for refuge along the way. By the 11th century, the major Catholic centers of Europe at that time, Italy, France, and England, had new shrines ”springing up like mushrooms after rain, sometimes taking firm root, sometimes provoking a brief support of enthusiasm, before falling back into oblivion.”

    Even without being paraded around, shrines and images of saints were thought to have the conscious spirit of the being contained within the statue or other depiction of them. A stained glass image of St. Thomas in Canterbury, England shows him appearing to a man who visits his shrine. This is a representation of the ostensible belief that many Christians had in images of their saints.

    The Church was not opposed to its members going on pilgrimages to these shrines and so, over time, the relics of a saint would occasionally be contained within the statue and increased veneration numbers. St. Foy’s statue was encrusted with precious stones resembling your average Hindu goddess. Contained within her statue and others of equal caliber were said to be actual parts of the saint’s physical being. These pieces of bone, vials of blood, the head, tufts of hair or other important relic would be added to the statue of its patron and made with silver, gold or another metal.

    Pilgrimages to holy shrines or holy sites were done out of personal choice, but occasionally the church would assign a pilgrimage as a penance for transgressions and other sins against the church. These pilgrimages were not just for your average sinner though, they were for all sinners: murderers, rapists, those who committed incest, zoophiles, women of loose morals, monks, clergy, Kings (Henry II of England as part of his penance for the death of Sir Thomas Becket) and even Holy Roman Emperors (Otto III) were all given pilgrimages of varying lengths as penance depending on their sins. Some pilgrimages were local and could be done over a matter of months. Others involved trips to Rome and longer trips to the holy land and throughout Europe, sometimes assigned naked and typically barefoot, in the same manner as the time of Jesus.

    Shrines can be used as a security blanket for the final years of one’s life. A King of France, Robert the Pious, toured nine shrines before his death in 1031. His biographer noted that he hoped “to evade the awful sentence of the day of judgment” through his tours. In a way, a cleansing was possible by visiting these shrines on a pilgrimage for it was believed that those who went on a pilgrimage had a better chance of getting into heaven.

    One site of interest is that of the River Jordan which was frequented not only for its ties to the life of Christ but also for its healing powers. Upon reaching the River Jordan, one would be able to swim where Jesus swam and imitate a recorded instance of Christ’s life. (Although it may seem like blasphemy, it is done with great respect.) Although not a widespread problem today, it was a healing site for leprosy according to the Bible. As early as the 1480s, individuals would come with bottles of water to take samples home with them both as a memento and for the healing powers that were contained within the water.

    Pilgrimages in old times were done on foot and rarely on horse as walking was the most virtuous method of traveling and something one could easily apply in following the traditions of Jesus. The typical traveler would travel barefoot, wearing only a simple tunic or shawl, and with very little money. “Companions set out for Rome rich in the abundance of their poverty.” These ‘companions’ have a remarkable relation to those who toured with any band from the 1960’s, particularly The Grateful Dead, and even to present day. The vast numbers of those who went on tours could be associated with pilgrims by going with little or no money, but simply a destination in mind. Finding their happiness in a lack of want for nothing but finding themselves and having fun was their spiritual purpose and destination. This connotation was typically a negative one for if you were associated with those individuals that were the poster-children for touring, a guilt by association comment could be heard somewhere, somehow, and your identity was secured with theirs. However, in looking at the historical perspective of those who would take their trip barefoot in basic clothes and with little money we were, and still are, all surrounded by those who were more humble seeking a higher spiritual end than others and this blended with their reputation. Indeed, to be grouped with these individuals was much more of a compliment than an insult in many ways. Guilt by association was really spirituality by association. It was a welcome connection and still is.

    Shrine Badges

    While there were pilgrimages that were conducted in medieval times to saint shrines all across Europe, there became an increasingly availability of someone selling a token or votive that noted you had made said pilgrimage. The original intent of the pilgrimage was not necessarily to obtain this memento, but in the end, it came to signify every aspect of the trip and effort made to receive the saint’s blessings. Later on, it could be worn to signify where you had been as well as the nature of your beliefs. Even as one travels up a road to Buddhist temples throughout Japan, the sides of the road are lined with small stands where one can buy a souvenir to remember the journey.

    Pilgrimages are not reserved to greater Eurasia, however, and one can simply look across the Atlantic to Mexico where the third largest pilgrimage site in the world is located, behind only the Vatican and Mecca (numbers 1 and 2, respectively). Guadalupe is the location of a shroud that is said to have the image of the Virgin Mary as she appeared to a Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin in December 1531. On a walk from his village into the city, he saw a vision of the Virgin Mary who told him to build a church where she saw him. However, when Juan Diego told the Bishop about this he did not believe what he had heard and asked for proof of this appearance. The Virgin appeared to Juan Diego again and told him to gather flowers from a hill even though it was winter and flowers were not in season. He found Spanish Roses and when he presented them to the bishop an image of the Virgin Mary appeared on his robe and remained imprinted there. Still to this day, the original Basilica, as well as the larger and more modern Basilica of our Lady of Guadalupe, are standing outside Mexico City and the image of the Virgin is revered and viewed by millions each year.

    Upon a recent trip to Mexico City, I went on a tour of Guadalupe and in the short hour I was there, the presence and history of pilgrimages and the purchasing of votives as a proof that you had been to a certain holy site was as present today as they were over one thousand years ago. Guadalupe is dear to the hearts of Catholics worldwide, but especially that of Mexicans. In turn, upon visiting the shrine, many are praying, kneeling, and crying out for forgiveness or healing of one form or another. However, what was next upon saying your blessings and having a possible renewal of faith come about? The answer was just out the door and to the left – the gift shop. While this is a modern day recounting of a visit to Guadalupe, marketing and helping to fund the church is as old as the Catholic Church itself. Upon approaching the gift shop, I noticed that the walls are covered with images and depictions and various representations of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Instinctively, I began to consider what I would buy and for whom? I had pictures and needed only perhaps a small prayer card to hang on a corkboard but what else? There were paintings, drawings, wooden etchings, postcards, rosaries, shirts, hats, candies, children’s toys, and various depictions of Juan Diego. It was truly a market for one to buy a memorial of where they had been to show to others and to serve as a reminder for that individual.

    Exactly how and when votives came about are unclear, but the purpose of them has been constant throughout history – to show people where you have been and to remind you of where you have been. When a fifty-something in Middle America wears a ‘Chicago 1983’ tour shirt while mowing the lawn, a statement of great magnitude is made about him. For one, you are well aware that he probably saw Chicago on tour in 1983 and, for that matter; he is a fan of the band to some degree. Even more so, this fifty-something wants you to know that he is proud to be a fan of the band or he is highlighting a comical point of his past when he saw the band on a goof. Whatever the reason he wears it, he makes a statement about himself and his personal preferences for music. The same can be inferred about the presumed Yankee fan in the Jeter #2 jersey, a Red Sox fan in the ‘Yankee’s suck’ t-shirt or the quite possible Syracuse Orange fan sporting a ‘Real Men Wear Orange’ shirt. The roots of buying items to reflect personal preferences and beliefs, as well as previous travels, go far back to medieval times and are apparent even today.

    Across the Ocean

    As Europe and its children stretched across an ocean to the Americas, religion, in all its forms, came with them from devoted to radical, extreme to faithful, and everything in between. Religious freedom was sought by many who flocked to America and religions were practiced freely as there was no governmental oversight in such an untouched wilderness of liberty.

    Early in American history, from the 1730s-1740s, a period that was later known as the 1st Great Awakening took place in which religion took on a more personal aspect of an individual’s life. Protestant churches and beliefs became widespread, particularly throughout New England. Christianity was brought to the slaves, challenged authority, and brought about debate between those who looked at religion as a part of life but not as deeply personal as these revivalists took it to mean. This Great Awakening focused mainly on people who were already church members, with elements of changing rituals, devotion and self-awareness, creating a more solid foundation that would be built upon in years to come.

    Less than a century later, the 2nd Great Awakening took place in the 1820s and into the 1830s, and this time there was a greater missionary effort involved. Indians were seen as those “needing to see the light” and convert to a belief system that would guarantee their soul would not forever burn in hell. These ideas, of course, were fully believed by those who grew out of churches 100 years prior. They felt as though they were sincerely doing the Lord’s work, leading to a massive amount of attempts at not only missions being created, but conversions and spreading of the good word.

    This era of revivals was not limited to converting non-Christians, but also to promoting massive gatherings for religious service with many preachers and attracting pilgrims from sparsely populated areas who were lonely and limited in their gregarious nature. At these events, there was a grand amount of participation as few would be able to just sit around and eat and not find something to keep them motivated to share in the festivities. There were anywhere from a few hundred to a few thousand people singing and dancing as well as having religious epiphanies. This led to the word about these events spreading and attracting those that wished for something like this in their life.

    Similarly, music festivals of all types have had similar ways of attracting people to gatherings as well as the effects upon individuals. Anyone who has attended can confirm that the festival is, typically, in a remote location, forcing the individual to go out of his or her way to attend the event. The goings on at festivals keep everyone active with few finding themselves out of place even if they were brought because they had little else to do. Singing and dancing are just as common as they were almost two centuries ago as are the multiple preachers/musicians in attendance.

    Both of these first Great Awakenings were of great importance to American history and culture and, even more so, to the new tradition of finding a core value and belief and setting out to spread the word to those around. Take music as a corollary to this concept of spreading religion. In the 20th century, plenty of bands would find their way spreading across the country, touring, giving people a taste of their music, and returning months or even years later with perhaps new songs and new things to sing/preach about and, in the process, creating a following of devoted fans. From there, the bands took on a higher status as more than just musicians, but as something that inspired and gave hope to those who came out to hear them. It even led to the followers of these bands bringing others along to concerts so that they too might hear the good sound and be ‘saved’. The roots of this come from America’s earliest roots, thanks to the efforts of those Europeans who brought such fervency in religion to this new world with them.

    Just like pilgrims, the concept of votives made the trip across the Atlantic as well. As you will see, when the 3rd Great Awakening took place in the late 1800’s, the use of votives changed over time. Since they were so fundamental to worshiping, their presence grew, both in worship, as well as the capitalistic tendency to buy souvenirs as proof of journeys undertaken. These two elements, religion and economics, were two things that almost combined with each other, unnoticed to those who followed these beliefs so greatly.

    Back in the Middle Ages, a pilgrimage to a holy shrine where you could buy something as a memory of the trip was thought of as a journey to a place of healing and therapy could be sought there, in a spiritual sense. Now, when you went to a mass gathering, or attended a revival as was common in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, you would find individuals selling everything from a small cross to a memento that could signify that the purchaser had not only been in the congregation, but had enough money to afford to prove it by purchasing the item. This is not the era of t-shirts, stickers, and posters but instead programs were sold telling you who would be speaking and preaching at what time as well as countless other items including clothing, bibles, and rosaries.

    Fast-forward to the early 1900’s and entertainment had begun to creep into the heart of America. In following the tradition of touring the country, soon traveling acts of music and comedy would travel and stop in various towns if just for a night or even a week. Vaudeville is the root of American entertainment and music. Directly from this era comes the propensity for fans to not only attend a show as frequently as they could but also to get souvenirs at each show they went to starting with the infamous ‘Playbill’, still around today at plays and shows throughout the country. When a performance had a long run, a special program was printed up to promote the show as well as being on sale at the show itself. Some souvenir programs were printed on parchment and other times satin or even silk. Soon this led to lavish programs being created, adding to the individuality of each run of shows and beckoning fans to come out and see the show. This helped to pay for the program thereby increasing revenue for the promoter. These programs are of great importance not only to the individual who initially purchased it, but also for historians. These programs documented a complete tour conducted by a theatrical company as well as allowing for an immediate, as well as present-day, chronological historical sample.

    While Vaudeville was the predominant form of entertainment in the early 20th century, movies and radio soon became the main form of entertainment. People would sit with their ears glued to their radio to hear an ‘Amos n’ Andy’ show or one of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s ‘Fireside chats’ during the era of the Great Depression. At this time there was great uncertainty and job loss, as well as rampant poverty as the world fell to the mercy of a catastrophic depression. With a decrease in the availability of cash on hand, there was a decline and disappearance of memorabilia and items that one could consider votives from this era. However, this would all change in the years following the end of World War II as music had become a broadening part of American culture and daily life allowing for the blues, jazz, gospel, and rock n’ roll to increase their listening audience through the radio, as well as by touring around the country. The groundwork laid by everyone from Ray Charles to Louis Armstrong to Buddy Holly would set the stage for the re-emergence of a religiously rooted culture that had been dormant since the early Renaissance and was about to be recreated on a grand scale through the emergence of one of the greatest and most influential rock bands in history, The Grateful Dead.

    The emergence of The Grateful Dead in American music history augmented a grass roots music culture that was spawned in the early-mid 1960’s. Once the band had generated a following that was somewhere along the lines of a peaceful cult with no membership fee melded with that of a traveling circus/freak show, the limits were soon boundless. An economy would be generated around this tightly knit community. While this seems to be nothing more than trivial, one of the first signs of an organized society is that of a hierarchy – the band, the crew, the groupies, the fans, and an economy.

    The latter evolved greatly over time, as all good things do. At first, the basics would be offered like food and drink which anyone could buy quantities of and sell on tour and at shows, if only to maintain a zero sum balance and make it from Point A to Point B to Points C-Z without any great stress. Of course drugs were in this mix, but no economy can survive on drugs alone. Try surviving on nothing but aspirin, coffee, and beer. (On second thought, don’t.) The economy of Grateful Dead fans evolved into something as large as the band itself. From town to town, show to show, and venue to venue, fans followed the band as all pilgrims follow what they seek (or at least the keepers of something greater that took time to seek) and in their midst, a culture was created. This was something unseen before in modern American, let alone, world history.

    Markets

    The common thread through these early forms of pilgrimage is the presence and concept of markets, which create a microcosm of economy in a small, centralized location where profit is most likely to be found, with both a barter and monetary basis. These vendors and entrepreneurs fall into one of two categories:

    1. Those who are of purely religious and holy backgrounds, hoping to add an element of remembrance to a pilgrim’s trip by selling them a small token to represent their travels, including votives to bring into the shrine to leave as an offering.
    2. Those who make an effort to make money off those who are focused on religion, in essence, duping them into purchasing things, while not sharing in or understanding fully the deeper meaning and purpose that these pilgrims have in making this spiritual journey.

    There are also those vendors who are wise to target the more immediate needs of these pilgrims by selling food and drink while they are making their pilgrimage, although these individuals still fall into the two categories mentioned earlier, a mixture of both the secular (sacred) and the profane. The fundamental conclusion is that a small economy was grown around shrines to meet and serve the needs of the pilgrims. Without interest in saint shrines, there would be no vendors; conversely, with shrines comes an economy of necessity.

    By the early 1980s, the term ‘Shakedown Street’ was created in reference to the select areas of the parking lots where fans would group together to peddle their wares, as there is safety in numbers and there is no sense setting up shop where people aren’t. The lyrics to the Grateful Dead’s ‘Shakedown Street’ define exactly what it was: a place that might not seem to be bustling with anything that might interest you, but if you look around there is surely something that you might like. In other words, don’t judge a book by its cover. Check it out; you never know.

    Nothin’ shakin’ on Shakedown street, used to be the heart of town
    Don’t tell me this town ain’t got no heart, You just gotta poke around
    You say you’ve seen this town clear through, (Well, well, well – you can never tell)
    Nothin’ here that could interest you, (Well, well, well – you can never tell)
    It’s not because you missed out, on the thing we had to start
    (Garcia/Hunter)

    While the roots of Shakedown Street evolved out of the small barter economy that was created in the 1960’s among folk and other music acts of the that era, shows at the Oakland Auditorium in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s were the dawn of what fans are familiar with today, in a sense. Fans from that era might look at the lot scene today and see something vastly different than what they had both pre and post show in their time. As with all things, they change and those who grow old view change with chagrin and look back with delight at the “good ol’ days.” As the band toured, the fans sold everything from the aforementioned drugs to food and beer to clothing. The seminal tie-dye shirts became the identification of a Deadhead or a hippie in general.

    By the tours of 1987 and 1988, coinciding with the Dylan/Dead tour, and coupled with the release of the widely popular album In the Dark, featuring the Top 10 hit “Touch of Gray,” plenty of new fans came to the scene. The fandom of the Grateful Dead had expanded to the point where the shows not only sold out, but also brought about hundreds and even thousands of fans to the venues in hopes of getting into the show or at least getting to experience the scene outside. Even though you couldn’t hear the music, you were in good company and could have a blast just hanging out with friends and making new ones in the lots.

    As the Grateful Dead entered the last decade of the 20th Century, the fans changed their demographic while still yet retaining the defining characteristics of the following the Grateful Dead has over the years. The torch was passed from show to show and tour to tour as new fans picked up the habits and trades of the old ones. Fans who were still in diapers when the Grateful Dead were doing their first acid tests were now the predominant fans on the lot. While the general crowd did not vary much, the 1990’s had more middle-class fans following the band around, something that can be explained with the aforesaid popularity of the Dead on the radio, as well as the fading possibility of traveling the country on a concert tour. There were few, if any, other touring acts like the Grateful Dead, and there was no successor in sight.

    It would take only a short time before the Grateful Dead would have an heir-apparent. The emergence of Phish in the early 1990’s as a dominating touring band had a rabid fan following that could only be compared to the Dead. As Phish started to dabble in playing amphitheaters in 1992 with Santana and the Horde festival, the stage would be set to follow in the footsteps of the culture that the Grateful Dead helped spawn. With the passing of Jerry Garcia in August 1995, the band soon broke up and many who were used to little else but living summers touring and enjoying a release that could only be spawned by live music had to assess their situation.

    Further Festival, Ratdog, and Phil and Friends filled that gap but only after a requisite time of mourning for both band members and fans. Phish attracted a fair share of Grateful Dead fans who found themselves suddenly sans band and not having achieved and experienced what they had hoped to in their time of touring. For each, what you hope to experience is different. This explains why some see one show, some see 20, and some 100 – to each his/her own. In the summer of 1996 and 1997, Phish had large festivals in remote parts of the Northeast (The Clifford Ball and The Great Went) that brought together nearly 180,000 people between the two. From here, the Phish lots were a re-creation of the Dead lots. While the times change, so does the market and products on the market. Heady beers, heavier drugs (particularly ecstasy and cocaine), and wider selections of food and drink were offered. Fans opened up businesses to go on tour selling food from a wagon and providing fans with what they needed while waiting in hopeful anticipation for the show to start.

    From the late 1990s to the end of Phish’s career in 2004 at Coventry, the lots continued to evolve and branch out to other tours. Fans saw that there was a nearly 52-week touring calendar with only a couple weeks off after New Years Eve and an occasional break between touring action. Whether going on tour year round with occasional stops at a home base to rest and refuel or staying at home and hitting off shows at leisure while creating an Internet site to supplement your income, the touring community met head on with the new world wide web of music fans and customers. Music, shirts, posters, paraphernalia, art, and opinions: soon the economy that grew and matured with the Grateful Dead would expand to Phish fans in a more widespread manner than one could ever have hoped for, let alone imagined. When technology and music mix, good things always come about.

    Conclusion

    Modern history has proven time and time again that when people are presented with something or someone that they care deeply about and can form a group effort and attention towards this, they will do so with fervency and vigor that is not seen elsewhere in human interests. With both music and religion, a central unifying theme brings together individuals from various walks and ways of life. Each has the base purpose of appreciating what has been given to them and, in many cases, sharing this appreciation with others. The need for human interaction and gatherings leads to the various examples of pilgrimages that have been undertaken throughout the last 2000 years. As time progresses, evidence shows that the efforts each individual puts forth into showing their faith resulted in the creation of items that showed where they had been, serving as a status symbol of sorts and defining that person amongst their peers.

    As the Allman Brothers sang about a revival in the air, religion does as well, with major gatherings and telecasts by Rev. Billy Graham, megachurch sermons led by Joel Osteen, and others who tend to the religious throughout this country. Live music will reach popularity levels that only religion has held for the last 5,500 years and perhaps eventually host the predominant gregarious gathering of people over time. Both come from the same traditions and experiences and are intertwined throughout their history.

    By the latter half of the 20th century, music has taken on a religious form that has made it the centerpiece of an individual’s daily life. From iPods to Bonnaroos and music videos to YouTube, each person who goes looking for music can find it in innumerable forms. However, those who seek music in a live setting and who make it a point to find the experience and raw nature of music as it is being created are carrying on a two-millennia old tradition of worship, pilgrimage, and advertising that guide their lives.

    This article was originally published in PhanArt: The Art of the Fans of Phish, February 2009

  • Book Review: Peter Conners’ ‘Cornell ’77’

    May 8 will mark 40 years since the Grateful Dead descended upon Ithaca and performed a concert that would go down as the most talked about show in the band’s 30-year history.

    Many people say it’s the greatest performance in the Dead’s storied history, and it’s easily the most documented show the band ever performed. In the new book, “Cornell ’77,” author Peter Conners dissects the famous and infamous concert at Barton Hall on the Cornell campus in a variety of ways, from culling excerpts of local media at the time, to finding and interviewing attendees of the show, to emailing with the living band members.

    The history of the Grateful Dead has been documented endlessly in print form, with full band documentaries, autobiographies, fan accounts and everything in between. But Conners’ book is the first time a single show has been viewed on such an in-depth level, and with good reason: May 8. 1977, is the most downloaded Grateful Dead concert ever, and has been streamed live more times than any other.

    Conners clearly spent his time in piecing together information for the book. He rounded up newspaper clippings from the time, both previewing and reviewing the show, located a few people who attended the concert and spoke on record, and even got some of the band members to give their input.

    The first chunk of the book gives a history lesson of sorts into the Dead up until that time, including a great deal about the famed Wall of Sound, and more importantly a lot of insight about the near breakup, which turned into a hiatus, in 1974.

    The most interesting parts are in the chapter titled “Cold Rain and Snow,” where Conners depicts a few fans’ experiences of the entire day, from traveling to the area, to getting in the show and how the fans viewed the music at the time. Fan Robert Wagner, who traveled from North Carolina to upstate New York, gives anecdotes about experiencing snow in the spring that catapult the reader back to 1977. This chapter easily is the book’s selling point.

    Something that has been documented ad-nauseam is listener reviews of the show. Conners did not attend the show — he was a Deadhead in his youth, however — but did give some of the better breakdowns of the songs performed that night that I have ever read. At times, Conners’ comparisons were a bit odd: he compared “U.S. Blues’” line about skinning a goat to a cat, which left me wondering what he meant; later, he compared “quaaludes running through the bloodstream” to the jam in “Supplication,” and I was, admittedly, a bit lost. But in the end, Conners ended up giving readers a completely unique review of the show, breaking each song down, while providing a little history and context for each one.

    While the premise of the book is initially intriguing, “Cornell ’77” does have its shortcomings. At times, the book appears to have not been edited very well, as it has a few glaring grammar problems.

    But my main issue with it, is that Connors seems to have pulled most of his information from other sources, while seemingly being unable get much information directly from the four living members of the band. Drummer Mickey Hart pours his heart out, as always, but outside of Planet Drum, the rest of the band is nearly absent outside of Conners taking quotes from past interviews conducted by others. That makes the book not feel fully authentic.

    If you’re a seasoned Deadhead, this book won’t provide you with much new information.

    But if you’re new to the Grateful Dead, this is a book I highly recommend checking out, as your eyes will be opened to an era of the Dead many think is the unquestioned leader in the handful of iterations of a rock and roll band beloved by its followers.

  • Celebrations Planned Across New York State on May 8 for Anniversary of Grateful Dead Show

    Next week on May 8, Grateful Dead fans around the world will mark the 40th anniversary of one of the most revered and traded shows in the band’s extensive history, that of 5/8/77 at Barton Hall at Cornell University. The show is a thing of legend for fans new and old, an oft listened to show that features numerous stand out versions of classic Dead songs. It has led to Tompkins Country Legislature announcing May 8 as ‘Grateful Dead Day’ and will also feature the release of a book covering the lore of the show, Cornell ’77: The Music, The Myth And The Magnificence Of The Grateful Dead’s Show At Barton Hall.

    may 8 grateful deadListen to the show below and check out the numerous events taking place across New York State to honor this milestone anniversary in Grateful Dead history.

    State Theatre of Ithaca

    Right in the town where the show was held, The State Theatre of Ithaca will hold….

    The event at The State Theatre of Ithaca will feature a special set of acoustic Grateful Dead music performed by Ithaca’s own tribute band, “Terrapin Station”, an official listening party of the 1977 release on the State Theatre’s brand new state-of-the-art sound system, a unique silent auction and a variety of special guests and speakers. In addition to the live music and Grateful Dead celebrations, Cornell University Press and author Peter Conners will also be in attendance chatting to fans about their new book “Cornell 77: The Music, The Myth and The Magnificence of The Grateful Dead’s Concert at Barton Hall”. Signed copies will also be available for purchase at this event.

    Dark Hollow at The Range in Ithaca

    Central New York’s Dark Hollow will perform the 1977 Barton Hall show at Cornell on May 8 for the 40th-anniversary celebration at The Range in Ithaca. Dark Hollow is one of the premier Grateful Dead bands in the Upstate NY area and will be joined by Rick Redington & the Luv, who seamlessly introduce the best aspects of country and folk into a variety of genres.

    Cornell Chimemasters

    In honor of the 40th anniversary, the Cornell Chimes will perform 4 songs from the Grateful Dead repertoire from 6 – 6:30pm on May 8. Fans are encouraged to bring blankets and spread out on the lawn around the tower. At 5:45pm, Dan Klein from the Tompkins County Legislature will read a proclamation declaring May 8, 2017 “Grateful Dead Day in Tompkins County.”Author Peter Conners will be available to sign copies of his new book from Cornell University Press Cornell ’77: The Music, The Myth, and the Magnificence of the Grateful Dead’s Concert at Barton Hall at the Cornell Store from 5:45-6:30pm

    The Cornell Chimes have been the heartbeat of Cornell’s campus life for more than a century, marking the hours and chiming concerts. The original set of nine bells first rang out at the university’s opening ceremonies October 7, 1868. Over time the chime has been recast and expanded to 21 bells; it continues to ring daily concerts, making it one of the largest and most frequently played chimes in the world. This marks the first time The Cornell Chimes will perform works by the Grateful Dead

    The Hollow Bar and Kitchen

    In Albany, Gratefully Yours will recreate the 5/8/77 show at The Hollow Bar and Kitchen with an all-star lineup of Albany musicians including Alex Mazur (Keyboards, Vocals), Adam Czolowski (Guitar, Vocals), Tom Pirozzi (Bass), Rob Schiff (Guitar, Vocals), Jeff Prescott (Drums) and Jessica Barlow (Vocals)

    Rhino Entertainment and The Capitol Theatre Present: 5/8/77 Revisited – A Grateful Dead Dance Party

    Part of the legacy of the Barton Hall performance is the quality of the recording that has circulated, and on May 8, The Capitol Theatre will host a listening party of the just-released “official” recording. The new recording will sound impeccably good through The Cap’s state-of-the art sound system and the new recording will be available for purchase at the event. Rhino Records will be on hand, giving away free stickers, patches, notebooks, and music releases as well. Also in attendance will be Larry Reichman, the “official” photographer of Cornell University on 5/8/77, who will be presenting never-before-seen images from this concert that we’ll be projecting on the walls of the Cap. He will also be promoting his upcoming book that will contain them. Tickets to this performance cost only $6.50 in advance – the original price of tickets for the Barton Hall performance in 1977.

  • A Quarter Century Q and A with Greg Bell

    Greg Bell has been promoting and putting on shows in the Capital Region now for 25 years. All month long in April, he will be celebrating that milestone with shows each weekend at the Hollow Bar and Kitchen in Albany.

    In late march 1992, Bell formed a partnership with his friend Dale Metzger called Two Fools Present. They proceeded to put on what turned out to be the first of many shows promoted by Greg. It was held on April Fools Day at the Masonic Hall on lower Madison Avenue. The bands who played were the Sharks, Hard Times, Motherjudge and Brian Kenny and Friends. Two Fools worked together for an outdoor festival and two or three more club shows and parted ways. In 1993 Bell teamed up with Jeff Guthrie to form Guthrie/Bell Productions. Jeff left the business a few years later but Bell continues to work under that name today.

    NYSMusic caught up with Bell to talk about his career and how he’s made it this far while staying so successful.

    Neil Benjamin: You’ve been putting on shows locally for a while, and now you’re celebrating a big anniversary. What’s it been like to be such a huge part of the Albany music scene?

    Greg Bell: I had always been a part of the local music scene .I had many friends in local bands and I probably went to at least one show per week from my college days until  I started promoting on my own. One of the reasons that I started putting on shows was to give local musicians  and the audience a situation to be in that treated them with respect instead of being treated as a product. I was always involved with the local music scene . One night , out drinking with a friend , we decided to throw a party with some friends’ bands just for fun . It was sort of like Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland saying “lets put on a show” in an Andy Hardy movie. The first show went well , so we did another . then another and it just sort of snowballed

    NB:Do you know how many shows you’re promoted?

    GB: Probably around 2,000.

    NB:What was your favorite show to put on? Can you share a memory or two?

    GB:Probably a tie between the first time that i had moe. play the Palace and the Phil and Friends show at the Glens Falls Civic Center when Trey Anastasio showed up and sat in for the entire show. the moe. show was exciting for me as they were the first band that I had taken from a small club situation to a big theater show . The Phil show is a given. I first saw the Dead in 1970 and here I was promoting a show with a member of the Dead and a member of Phish on stage. It was an amazing feeling.

    NB: How long do you plan  to do this?

    GB: According to my wife, until I die.

    NB: What’s the most difficult aspect of promoting shows around here?

    GB:The hardest thing for me is putting on an amazing band to a small crowd. I try to promote bands that I think people should see and I feel like I let some bands down when the turnout sucks. Only do this if you love music. If you do it for money, find something else.

    NB: How many concerts do you think you’ve attended and who is your favorite band?

    GB:My favorite band has been the Grateful Dead for 47 years . I couldn’t even guess how many shows that I have attended, but it’s a lot.

    NB:You attend most of the shows you put on. Is your family supportive of what you do and why?

    GB:My family is very supportive . My wife designs all of my flyers and posters as well as Bellstock tee shirts and loves coming to shows . My kids have been attending my shows since they were born and are proud of what I accomplished. They also like the fact that I can get them into concerts that they want to see.. One thing that I made sure of is that putting on shows was secondary to my family . I never missed a school concert or function  . I never missed their soccer games or track meets .I was a teacher , so I was able to spend all summer with my kids.

    NB:How has your approached changed over time as society and technology change? Is it easier or harder to promote in the social media age?

    GB:My approach hasn’t changed. Word of mouth is the way to go. Technology has made things easier, but handing out a flier is the best way to get people in the door.  The danger with technology is that it makes promoters lazy. It is so easy to just to think that you just need to send out a Facebook post or a text to get the word out. I truly believe that the personal touch of talking to people at shows and handing out flyers to people while explaining why they should come to a show is the best way to promote. I am at almost every show that I put on and I am constantly in contact with the people who attend my shows. They know that I only put on shows that I want to see and I think that gives my shows some credibility.

    Catch Guthrie/Bell’s 25th anniversary shows at The Hollow Bar and Kitchen in Albany:

    April 1 Wreckloose w/ School Bus Yellow and Hartley’s Encore
    April 15 Eastbound Jesus w/ Elrod & Motherjudge and the Grassroots Rebels [featuring members of Jerkwater Ruckus ]
    April 28 Dr. Jah and the Love Prophets w/ Lynch [featuring members of Conehead Buddha and Schleigho] and the Eastern Highs [featuring members of Free Beer & Chicken]

    All shows are 18+, tickets $12 in advance, $15 day of show. Doors at 7:30, show at 8pm

  • Holly Bowling brings Classical Phish and Grateful Dead to the Whisper Dome this Friday

    Holly Bowling is back on the road in March and after hitting Syracuse this week, she heads to a little known venue The Whisper Dome on Friday, March 24. The venue is a unique round room, perfect for jazz performances, and Bowling is excited to revisit the Capital Region as she does quite frequently, bringing with her classical reimaginings of the music of Phish and the Dead. Bowling chatted with NYS Music recently about the integration of Grateful Dead music into her setlists, performing with Everyone Orchestra and the musical handshakes that resulted.

    holly bowling whisper domePete Mason: How has integration of the music of the Grateful Dead and Phish changed since you began integrating the two and since you released Better Left Unsung.

    Holly Bowling: The setlists have gotten a little more Dead heavy. When I introduced Grateful Dead songs, the album wasn’t out yet, and it worked itself into the setlists gradually. The Dead have such a deep and extensive catalog and I continued to dig into that and add things to my repertoire. In general, the shift from playing all Phish and then Phish and The Dead together has opened up a whole new arc to each show and each set. As you know, as much as the two bands get compared to each other and lumped together, the music in truth is really, really different. There are some really touching and beautiful songs in the Dead catalog, and if you juxtapose a Dead song between a Phish song, you have to ease into each song in order to cover more stylistic ground in each show and make room for improvisation and bridging the space between the two bands and the place the music takes you.

    The other change is that adding in the Dead’s music, I’ve noticed the chord progressions are beautiful but they’re not incredibly complex. Some of those have been the hardest ones to work on. Having that in my catalog and adding into sets has taught me the importance of leaving space. Some songs in the Dead’s catalog are truly emotional for me – “Stella Blue,” “Wharf Rat,” stuff like that. There can be these delicate, very emotional moments and you can’t fill up all the space there. I’m really enjoying the variety that is coming with working with these catalogs both at once. It gives the shows more of an ebb and flow and opens the door for a good arc or storyline in each set. I try to put the sets together with a particular shape to it and you end up having more tools to work with in that way. There is still a balance between the two. I love the bands both very deeply.

    PM: In addition to your solo shows, you have been playing with the likes of Joe Marcinek Band and Everyone Orchestra.

    HB: I just played two shows with Everyone Orchestra in Charleston, SC and Asheville, NC. We played a bunch of Dead music together with Oteil Burbridge on bass (Dead and Company), Ian Neville on guitar (Dumpstaphunk), Natalie Cressman (TAB), Claude Coleman Jr. on drums (Ween), Wallace Mullinax (Dead 27’s), Mike Quinn, and Jeff Mosier on banjo (Blueground Undergrass), and we did an afternoon set called Everyone’s Dead with Matt Butler on drums, Anders Osborne, Oteil and myself. It was a great experience all around.

    PM: How have those experiences with Everyone Orchestra challenged you and affected your playing?

    HB: It feels natural. I hadn’t played with anyone in that lineup before. Matt will write a theme on his dry erase board and sometimes one specific instrument gets to lead a tune and make up the theme with Matt’s suggestion. To play a theme and meet these musicians through a musical handshake allows you to get to know people through performance, you start to hear everyone’s voice come through. Whoever starts out the song, you find out ‘This is your style, your voice’ and we find out what we sound like together. Then you hear their voice and you figure out how to add to it or complement it.

    The other things that was really cool about it is that no one is ever announcing what they’re going to do next, the most you can do is telegraph a chord change in a certain progression; if everyone moves to the 5, you know you’ll move back to the 1. It’s kind of a surrender, and instead of a group think and do the same move at the same time, if one person decides to go off in one direction, the group moves in that way. It’s different when you have a conductor and they’re at the controls of going to the B section. It’s unique and with someone calling the shots and conceptualizing where you want the show to go is a very different experience and it was really cool.

    PM: How did you come across The Whisper Dome?

    HB: We are always looking for piano rooms and also looking for unconventional spaces for a show. This happened in Portland at The Old Church and people walked out having never heard of the place and wanting to return. I like venturing outside the usual circuit of rooms that get played within our music scene. The style of music, by necessity, is a hybrid of different sounds so playing in jazz clubs, churches, clubs is reflects the variety of music. I think we found a picture of The Whisper Dome online from a jazz series they help and being called the Whisper Dome, it intrigued me. I think it’s good to change it up and give people an opportunity to have this grounding experience in a real quiet space can be really cool. Spaces like The Whisper Dome and really conducive to that kind of environment and listening atmosphere.

    PM: Todd Stoops (RAQ and Electric Beethoven) recently moved to the West coast and your hilarious airplane photo rivalry…

    HB: We’re gonna open an airline together. It’ll be expensive though, one customer per plane. (laughs)

    PM: Do you see yourself performing more with Todd now that he’s out west?

    HB: I feel like piano players don’t get to play together very often – sometimes there are two guitars in a band but rarely double keys. There’s an amazing movie Piano Players Rarely Ever Play Together that I highly recommend watching. It’s got Tuts Washington, Allen Toussaint, and Professor Longhair. You gotta check it out! But I digress. I’d love to play with Todd. Actually, I have side by side pianos in my living room currently – Todd, if you’re reading this, come over and play one of ’em! Double piano jams!

    Tickets are on sale now for Friday’s show at The Whisper Dome.

  • How Sweet It Is: Melvin Seals at The Westcott Theater

    On Wednesday, March 8, Syracuse celebrated the spirit of Jerry Garcia in spectacular fashion with help from Melvin Seals & JGB at the Westcott Theater.  The intimate evening began with the Upstate NY native band, Los New Yorkers.  The four-piece consisted of three middle aged men and one woman that hopped from one instrument to the next.  The feel-good and upbeat originals reminded me of something that might get chosen as the theme song for a 90’s sitcom on TGIF.  Members not only switched back and forth from guitars, washboard, drums, keys and bass but each member also brought their own original song to the table.  While most lyrics consisted of life-changing events, their love for New York State and generic happy moments, Los New Yorkers did not ignite that Jerry spark that many Deadheads in the crowd were seeking.  If I ever hear this band again, it will probably be while I am buying cotton candy at the New York State Fair because that is exactly how it made me feel.

    Melvin Seals Westcott TheaterWord has spread up and down I-81 about a Scranton-based bluegrass group known as The Dishonest Fiddlers, and the quartet did not disappoint.  This collection of traveling ramblers were chosen by Dave Brown, founder of the band, who swaps artists for every show, making the “About Page” on their Facebook profile dishonest.  The unique idea of taking musicians from different parts of the country allows Brown the freedom to mix it up at the drop of the hat and the pluck of a string. One downfall of never having the same band twice is that practice time is limited, therefore they are often forced to fight for space backstage.

    At The Westcott Theater, the foursome found themselves practicing in front of the men’s bathroom line, which welcomed them with clinched legs and open arms.  The first song of their actual set was dedicated to the “new friends in the bathroom line” as they channeled the folkie side of Garcia with a beautiful, “Rosa Lee McFall.”  The remainder of the seven-song set consisted of all originals and the crowd seem to genuinely enjoy every minute of it.  As the room began to fill up for Seals and JGB, Brown was hoping to elicit some crowd participation during “There Ain’t Enough Water in the Water” which was minimally responded to, at best!  As couples locked arms and rowdily stomped their feet, The Dishonest Fiddlers’ time was up and Brown thanked the Central NY crowd for their support during the band’s first ever visit to Syracuse.  For the sake of bluegrass music, I hope they return to the Empire State very soon.

    Melvin Seals Westcott TheaterNow past 11:00pm, fans were finally ready to embrace Melvin Seals & JGB and it was well worth the wait!  Aware of the time, the crowd let it all hang out as the group opened with a funky jam sequence leading into “After Midnight.”  While the famous Eric Clapton version of the classic fast-paced hit clocks in under three minutes, Seals kept this monster jamming for over 15 minutes!  While on the topic of iconic rock-n-roll, The Beatles were gently sandwiched in the middle of the Jerry-influenced “Midnight” jam as “Eleanor Rigby” made its appearance as it regularly did in the late-70’s and early-80’s.  The “Fab Four” from England were also covered during the next song of the evening, “I Want to Tell You,” which once again featured Zach Nugent filling in for Jerry on vocals.

    After the smoking hot start to the show, “When I Paint My Masterpeice” peacefully calmed the audience down and was highlighted by Nugent paying tribute to Garcia with his delicate and passionate playing.  “Neighbor, Neighbor” featured strong backing vocals from Cheryl Rucker and Shirley Starks, and on the night of International Woman’s Day 2017, the crowd was thoroughly glad to have these lovely ladies in their lives.  In the heart of the set list, the Garcia/ Hunter gem, “Mission In The Rain,” somberly described a lost soul searching for redemption and where Nugent’s vocal abilities fell below Garcia standards, his guitar solo was sorrowful and spot on.  The playful and gospel-influenced “Evangeline” lifted everyone’s spirits after the emotional “Mission” before the bluesy “Think” featured yet another powerful vocal collaboration.

    Melvin Seals Westcott TheaterBassist, John-Paul McLean, exchanged smiles and notes with Seals during the classic R&B cover of “Everybody Needs Somebody to Love” and to the delight of Deadheads in the room, Starks and Rucker pointed to the audience while they sang the chorus.  Love had captivated the audience throughout the entire show, but especially at the end of the evening when they transitioned from “Somebody to Love” to “How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You.”  Seals introduced the band and gave one more stellar B-3 organ solo during the extra sweet version.  Although the show ended past 1:00AM on Thursday morning, the band was not ready to say goodbye to their loyal fan base as Seals & JGB hung out by the merchandise table to chit chat with ticket holders.

    Seals has spent over 30 years in the spotlight mesmerizing audiences with his swirling keyboard-synth magic, but he is still the humble, welcoming, and sincere man he was when he first met Garcia.  As a child of the 90’s I have never gotten to see Garcia play live. Although I have listened to thousands of hours of recorded material, read numerous books and stared at videos on Youtube until my eyes were blood shot, I never had the opportunity to be a part of the touring community that was cherished by millions.  Thanks to bands like Melvin Seals and JGB, fans like myself and long-time fans alike can come together and share love, smiles and gratitude with their sisters and their brothers.

    Melvin Seals Westcott TheaterThe Dishonest Fiddlers Setlist: Rosa Lee McFall, My Brand New Jalopy, There Ain’t Enough Water in the Water, Steve, Sam’s Cigar, The TV Store, Steamtown Blues

    Melvin Seals and JGB Setlist: Jam, After Midnight*, I Want to Tell You, When I Paint My Masterpiece, Neighbor, Neighbor, Mission In the Rain, Evangeline, Think, Everybody Needs Somebody To Love, How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You

    *w/ Eleanor Rigby jam

  • Melvin Seals & JGB Return to Central NY

    This Wednesday, March 8, Melvin Seals & JGB will return to The Westcott Theater in Syracuse.  The “Keepers of the Flame” are no strangers to Central New York, having played the same venue less than six months prior and every year since 2012.

    The folky Dishonest Fiddlers as well as Upstate’s own Los New Yorkers are opening for Seals and his band, so fans can expect a little bit of everything on this upcoming hump day.   The Syracuse show is the third stop in the Empire State this tour, following their Friday night performance with special guests Ron Holloway and John Kadlecik at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester and the Tuesday night gig at the Buffalo Iron Works with Pink Talking Fish.

    Melvin Seals and JGB continue to show their love for New York as they return to the Putnam Den in Saratoga Springs on Saturday, March 11 and the Bearsville Theater in Woodstock on Sunday, March 12.  The different bills feature eclectic opening acts from all over the Northeast, so prepare for something unique and special to happen at every show.

    Tickets for Wednesday night’s show at the Westcott Theater are still available and the remainder of the tour dates can be found here.

  • Grateful Dead Announce Official Release of Legendary Cornell ’77 Show

    One of the Grateful Dead‘s most revered shows is finally seeing the light of day in an official release this spring to mark the show’s 40th anniversary.

    The band played its first of three shows (1977, 1980, and 1981) on May 7, 1977, booked by the Cornell Concert Commission after some troubles with booking live acts in the years prior. May ’77 wasn’t first live Cornell campus appearance from the Grateful Dead family however. The Jerry Garcia Band had performed at Cornell’s Bailey Hall less than two years prior on 10-27-1975. The May 1977 lineup for the Grateful Dead included the core of Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, as well as Donna and Keith Godcheaux.

    Photo: dead.net

    The official release, in the form of a 5-LP box set and CD, will contain the entire Cornell ’77 show mastered from the Betty board tapes. Not only will this Barton Hall show be released, included in another 11-CD box set (May ’77: Get Shown The Light) will be 5/5/77 at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in New Haven, CT, 5/7 at Boston Garden, and 5/9 at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium.

    Cornell ’77 Poster designed by Cornell alumnus Jay Maybrey

    Many sources of the Barton Hall show have been circulated over the years, including unofficial soundboards (heard over on archive.org) which are of decent quality, though with some flaws inherent to the taping and matrix mixing process. Rolling Stone gave a sneak preview of “Morning Dew” from the upcoming release and after listening to the bootlegs of Barton Hall, the release promises to be a fantastic treat for Deadheads.

    The various release formats for the Cornell ’77 show and the other May 1977 shows debut on May 5 and pre-orders for it are available now over at dead.net. Only limited quantities of the 5-LP vinyl box set of the Cornell ’77 show are available.

    Peter Conners, author of “Growing Up Dead” and other works on the Grateful Dead is working on a book titled “Cornell ’77,” chronicling the Dead’s appearance at Cornell set to be published by Cornell University Press.

  • The Egg Hosts Legendary Chicano Rockers Los Lobos

    A uniting sound in a time of discord was found with Los Lobos at The Egg Performing Arts Center in Albany, on Sunday, January 29. The legendary cross-cultural rock n roll group brought out a rising tempo over the course of two sets in the Hart Theater this evening.

    The first set was highlighted by “Burn It Down,” while the second set took off with the rockabilly “Train Don’t Stop Here,” highlighted by Conrad Lozano on bass with Cesar Rojas’ vocals. The iconic “Kiko and the Lavender Moon” was soulful and smooth as always, with that haunting accordion from David Hidalgo. “Mas Y Mas,” found the band joined by a guest trombonist and Steve Berlin on trumpet.

     

    Kiko and the Lavender Moon @LosLobosBand @theeggpac #tejano #nysmusic

    A video posted by NYS Music (@nystatemusic) on


    “Last Night” brought the crowd to their feet, and featured lyrics from “Turn on Your Lovelight” and a brief horn duel, then segued seamlessly into the Buddy Holly classic “Not Fade Away.” The set ended with a rousing rendition of the Grateful Dead’s “Bertha,” and an encore of Traffic’s “Light Up or Leave Me Alone.” Once again, the timeless Los Lobos sound rocked The Egg, bringing rock n roll and Tejano together to the delight of the audience.

    Los Lobos Albany