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Gathering of the Vibes 2010 | Photos

Words & Images by: Max Flatow

Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.29.10-08.01.10 :: Seaside Park ::
Bridgeport, CT

Amidst a sea of tie-dye and Dead-y emanations, another Gathering of the Vibes went
down this past weekend. An unusually sunny, cloudless sky loomed over Bridgeport,
Connecticut’s Seaside Park for four straight days this past weekend, making the 2010 GOTV
a great success. Oh, and the music was fantastic too. From festival regulars like Dark Star Orchestra,
Donna Jean
Godchaux
and Max Creek to Jimmy Cliff, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Damian “Jr. Gong”
Marley
& Nas
and a newly reunited Primus (with
original drummer Jay Lane, who has also played with RatDog and Furthur), the
diverse lineup was nothing short of stellar.

Day One was off to a good start, with DSO, the Quincy Mumford Band, Donna Jean, and the
New Riders of the
Purple Sage
on the festival’s main stage – all celebrating the life and legacy of
Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead. The party continued on the Green Vibes Stage until
the wee hours of the morning with Big Sam’s Funky Nation. Day Two saw more gorgeous weather, more
dancing, and more bands like Jackie Greene, Steve Kimock Crazy Engine, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Robert Randolph,
and the highly anticipated Furthur performance. Aside from a few lyrical flubs on Bob
Weir
‘s part, the two sets were packed with tight jams and beautiful musicianship. They
closed the evening with an exceptional encore of “Lady with a Fan > Terrapin > At a Siding
> Terrapin Flyer.”

Days Three and Four were alive with energy, as Max Creek, The Rhythm Devils
with Keller
Williams
, Assembly
of Dust
, Primus, Galactic, Umphrey’s McGee, Little Feat, Jimmy Cliff, and a festival closer of Damian Marley &
Nas. While the burnt, worn-out crowd normally thins out on the last day of the Vibes, the
concert field remained packed with fans in high spirits, willing and able to continue the
party. It looks like Gathering of the Vibes 2011 might be well underway already.

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7/29/10 – 8/1/10 @ Gathering of the Vibes (Bridgeport, CT) View
Photos


All Good | 07.08-07.11 | West Virginia

Word by: Jarrod Dicker | Images by: Jeffrey
Dupuis

All Good Festival :: 07.08.10-07.11.10
Marvin’s Mountaintop ::
Masontown, West
Virginia

All Good Music Festival is the premier summer event that completely satisfies its
cheerful, laid-back
moniker in both an audible and societal sense. Nestled comfortably on Marvin’s Mountaintop, the
four day
extravaganza flaunts over 40 hours of music on three different stages with no overlapping
acts, period. Celebrating
its 14th anniversary, this year’s mid-Atlantic holiday held nothing back, scheduling over
35 bands for around-the-
clock performances that left you sacrificing sleep for fear of missing anything.

Unofficially, this year’s All Good Festival had become a multi-day tribute to the music
and culture of the Grateful
Dead. While other mega-acts were peppered throughout the lineup, Dead affiliated groups
were undoubtedly worth
their salt, drawing packed crowds throughout each of their respected sets.

This year, the ingredients for “goodness” were simple: Great music, laid-back vibes,
beautiful scenery, and friendly
people. Dash on some of the best musicians on the scene like Widespread Panic, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Grace Potter and the
Nocturnals
, George Clinton and
Parliament-
Funkadelic
, etc. and you had a recipe that bolsters the truly celebrates 14 years
of sights and sounds
where life is actually “All Good.”


Bob Weir

Forever Grateful

Friday evening, festival juggernauts Furthur took the stage and performed nearly four hours of material
for the 15th
anniversary of Jerry Garcia’s last performance with the Grateful Dead. Repeating only
three tracks that were
performed at Garcia’s last show in July of 1995 (“Cumberland Blues,” “So Many Roads” and
“Sugar Magnolia”), Furthur
injected vigor into various Dead classics from “Brown-Eyed Women” in the first set to
kicking off the second set with
“Uncle John’s Band” and encoring with “Ripple.” They even glossed over original work with
new track “Colors of the
Rain,” which fit soundly with the unruly weather Friday night.

On Thursday, the Donna Jean
Godchaux Band
opened the musical celebration, honoring the Dead with “Sugaree” and
“Help on the
Way/Slipknot!,” where guitarist Jeff
Mattson
further promoted his ability to mimic Jerry’s playing (and even physical
demeanor) to a T.
Dark Star
Orchestra
, who
headlined Thursday night’s festivities, were the talk of the festival. Faced with
categorical adversity, the Grateful
Dead “cover band” truly lived up to their insistence that they are prolonging the message
of the Dead as a “spirit
band.” Performing an original set, DSO highlighted a series of hits including “Cassidy,”
“China Cat Sunflower > I
Know You Rider,” and “Not Fade Away.” A beautiful sight to be seen and heard, DSO
successfully made believers out
of doubters atop Marvin’s Mountain.


Donna Jean Godchaux

Late Night Revels

Customary to most festival’s late night acts, All Good provided an overnight scene packed
with electronica and DJ
sets by The New
Deal
, Bassnectar, Lotus, DJ Harry
and
others to offer some
momentous fuel to keep the audiences’ tanks off empty.

However, two major highlights of this festival were from late night performers who are not
wedged into the hip-
hop/electronica field. On Saturday night, improvisation laced experimental jazz quartet
Garage A Trois
took the stage and
launched the audience on a journey via manipulated horns, keys, circuit bent toys and
doorbell sounds. Amassing
the best improvisational artists on the scene, this jam band mega-group of Marco
Benevento, Mike Dillon,
Stanton Moore
and Skerik have further positioned themselves as forces to be
reckoned with when
considering the must-see groups on the jam circuit. They performed their staple cover of
Led Zeppelin’s “No
Quarter,” which left half of the crowd struggling to lift their jaws from the grass and
muck.

Following GAT’s Saturday evening performance was bluegrass favorite’s Yonder Mountain String
Band
, who
carried the musical torch energetically into the night. The group hit some newer material
(“Out Of The Blue”) and
rested lightly on covers, channeling Ozzy Osbourne (“Crazy Train”) and J.J. Cale (“After
Midnight”). Diehard fans were
pleased by the band dipping into their first album Elevation with “Mental
Breakdown” and “If There’s Still
Ramblin’ in the Rambler.” Even late into the night, YMSB can re-ignite the sky with
blazing bluegrass riffs and high
energy on stage persona that make the audience in attendance oblivious to the chirping
birds and impending
sunrise as they edge into morning.


Keller Williams

K-Dub Sandwich

Sunday, the final day of the festival, was reserved for Keller Williams, bookending the festival with a morning and
afternoon closing set. The
morning run, dubbed Keller’s Moonshine Breakfast, involved husband and wife duo
Larry & Jenny
Keel
for a set that focused primarily on their new album, Thief (a collection
of cover songs), but
peppered in some hits to the crowd’s delight. Passing out moonshine to all the early
risers, fans were pleasantly
bopping to bluegrass renditions of Marcy’s Playground’s “Sex and Candy” and Kris
Kristofferson’s “Year 2003 Minus
25″ ’til they tipped over. Later in the day, the All Good legend closed the festival with
Keller Williams & The
Added Bonus
, comprised of Claude Arthur, Jay Starling and Toby
Fairchild
. As stated
earlier, All Good 2010 unofficially paid homage to the Grateful Dead throughout the
weekend and as expected, the
Added Bonus put the icing on the cake with renditions of “Bertha” and “Shakedown
Street.”


Widespread Panic

Beyond the Music

Beyond the spectacular variety of music and festivities All Good provides for its fans, it
also contributes its altruistic
nature to the residents of Masontown, West Virginia as well. In a town where the
population tops out at 1,000
strong, it can often be overwhelming to see tens of thousands of “strangers” roll through
your neighborhood for one
weekend each year. But as Tim Walther of Walther Productions explains, All Good
donates funds
throughout the local community and other departments around the neighborhood as a symbol
of gratitude for their
space.

“We generate a ton of revenue to all of the local retail outlets,” he told the
Meadville Tribune. “We generate
a lot of taxes for the state, we put local folks and companies to work for the week and we
hire local nonprofit
groups.”

The festival also donates funds to the local Masontown Fire Department, who provide a
shower service for the event.
All Good also prides itself on working with even larger non-profits like the Rex
Foundation, Conscious Alliance,
Headcount, and Rock the Earth. All Good is truly a festival where the name fits the place
(and the people).


New Mastersounds

Key Covers

Umphrey’s
McGee
wowed
the crowd on a hazy, grey afternoon. Rolling through hits old and new, the jam band
princes performed an
instrumental ” I’m On Fire” (Bruce Springsteen) and a flawless “It’s About That Time”
(Miles Davis). Greensky
Bluegrass
woke up
Shakedown dwellers with “We’re an American Band” (Grand Funk Railroad) on the Grassroots
Stage. Derek Trucks
and Susan Tedeschi kicked off their performance with The Beatles’ ” I’ve Got a Feeling”
and teased Bob Marley’s
“Trenchtown Rock” midway through their set. Donna Jean Godchaux and Jeff Mattson
channeled The Beatles as well,
displaying dual vocals on “She Said, She Said.”

Key Collaborations

Derek Trucks sat in with Widespread Panic to close their first set with “Second Skin,”
“Gimme,” and “Henry Parsons
Died.” Earlier in the evening Panic’s Jimmy Herring sat in with Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi. Jennifer
Hartswick
played trumpet
with Tea Leaf
Green
on
“Georgie P” as well as joining the Rex Jam during the Everyone Orchestra set. Dark Star Orchestra’s Rob Koritz
sat in with Donna
Jean Godchaux Band and Baltimore’s The Bridge for “Geraldine.”

JamBase | Mountain High
Go See Live Music!

View more photos below or flip over to page two to check ‘em all out on one screen.

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7/8/11 – 7/11/10 – All Good Festival @ Marvin’s Mountaintop (Masontown,
WV)
View Photos

Images by Jeffrey Dupuis


Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/Jeff Mattson


Femi Kuti


Phil Lesh


Bob Weir


Railroad Earth


George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic


Perpetual Groove


Susan Tedeschi


The New Mastersounds


Widespread Panic


Stanton Moore


The Lee Boys


Dark Star Orchestra Picks Jeff Mattson As New Guitarist

TRICKSTER GETS THE GIG

Dark Star Orchestra announced today that Jeff Mattson will be taking on the Jerry Garcia role and welcomes him as a full time member of the group. The band’s statement reads:

“After months of touring and playing with Jeff, we have decided to offer him the full time gig, which he has gratefully accepted. Jeff has blown us away with his energy, licks, and presence on stage. He is a great guy, an inspiring musician and so much fun to perform with, we cannot wait to get back out there and mix it up with him once again. We are having more fun than ever and are looking forward to seeing you all at the upcoming shows.”

A veteran of more than 30 years on the road, Mattson was a founding member of the Zen Tricksters and has performed in two bands of actual Grateful Dead members with Phil Lesh & Friends and the Donna Jean Godchaux Band. Relix Magazine recently praised his “eerily on-point Garcia interpretations” and Jambase.com noted: “Any doubts about new lead guitarist-singer Jeff Mattson were erased by a breathtaking ‘Eyes of the World’ where Mattson continually proved a real prize in his new role, bringing all his years in The Zen Tricksters to bear and then upping the ante a bit more.” Here’s Mattson in full flight with DSO The Klein in Bridgeport, CT.

Dark Star Orchestra – Viola Lee Blues from Dark Star Orchestra on Vimeo.

Dark Star Orchestra Tour Dates :: Dark Star Orchestra News :: Dark Star Orchestra Concert Reviews


Furthur to Headline GOTV

Furthur

Gathering of the Vibes has announced that Furthur featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir will headline this year’s festival.

GOTV 2010 takes place July 29-August 1 at Seaside Park in Bridgeport, CT. Furthur joins the already announced lineup that includes Primus, The Rhythm Devils, Jimmy Cliff, Umphrey’s McGee, Damian Marley & Nas, Galactic, Sharon Jones & The Dap Kins, Jackie Greene, Robert Randolph & The Family Band, Steve Kimock Crazy Engine, Dark Star Orchestra, Little Feat, The Radiators, Martin Sexton & Ryan Montbleau Band, Mix Master Mike, Deep Banana Blackout, Big Sam’s Funky Nation, Assembly of Dust, Max Creek, New Riders of the Purple Sage, Zach Deputy, Harlem Gospel Choir, King For A Day, Donna Jean Godchaux and more. The daily band lineups have been announced and can be seen here.

Tickets are available here.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 GOTV coverage!


All Good Adds: Grace Potter Keller & Keels, Late Night Bands

All Good Festival Adds Grace Potter & Keller + The Keels, Announces Late Night Bands

All Good 2009 by Pusey

The 14th annual All Good Festival has announced the addition of two additional artists to the already packed lineup as well as the groups performing late night at the event. The festival introduces the debut of ‘Moonshine Breakfast‘ with Keller Williams & The Keels, offering the classic mountaintop breakfast of moonshine and bluegrass taking place one morning of the event. Additionally, Grace Potter and The Nocturnals return to the mountain for the first time since 2008. The performers taking on the coveted late night slot include Lotus, Yonder Mountain String Band, Garage A Trois, The New Deal and Bassnectar.

For the first time ever the All Good Festival will be offering a Four Day Pass. In addition to three days of music in the main concert area, this will include admission to the Thursday Throw-down on the Grassroots stage July 8 with Dark Star Orchestra, The New Deal, Fort Knox Five and more, plus an extra night of camping. All tickets are on sale now through http://allgood.musictoday.com or charge by phone by at 1-800-594-TIXX. The Advanced 4-Day Passes (Thursday-Monday) are going fast and are currently available for $169, $55 off of the gate price.

Confirmed 2010 All Good Music Festival Artists:

FURTHUR featuring PHIL LESH & BOB WEIR

Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee

Yonder Mountain String Band

Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Band

Old Crow Medicine Show

Dark Star Orchestra

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic

Keller Williams & the Added Bonus

Bassnectar

Femi Kuti & the Positive Force

Grace Potter & The Nocturnals

Lotus

SOJA

Tea Leaf Green

Railroad Earth

Dr. Dog

Rebelution

The New Deal

The Bridge

Keller & The Keels

Perpetual Groove

Garage A Trois

Everyone Orchestra

Cornmeal

The New Mastersounds

The Travelin’ McCourys

Fort Knox Five

Donna Jean Godchaux Band w Jeff Mattson

The Heavy Pets

Papadosio

Dr. Didg

Lee Boys

The Macpodz

The Pimps of Joytime

For more on All Good see our 2009 review here.


All Good Adds TLG: Old Crow, Bridge, Pets & More

OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW, TEA LEAF GREEN, THE BRIDGE, DONNA JEAN GODCHAUX & MORE ADDED TO FEST

Already Confirmed Performers Include FURTHUR, WIDESPEAD PANIC, UMPHREY’S MCGEE, YMSB & MORE

Thousands Flock to the Rolling Mountains of Wild Wonderful West Virginia July 8-11

Today, the All Good Music Festival adds another robust array of artists to the four-night musical celebration taking place July 8-11 at Marvin’s Mountaintop in Masontown, WV. The 14th Annual festival is the musical highlight of peak summer for the thousands gathering for more than 40 hours of music from the jam scene’s biggest bands. The latest additions include: Old Crow Medicine Show, Tea Leaf Green, The Bridge, Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/Jeff Mattson, The Heavy Pets and The Pimps of Joytime.

All Good 2009 by Pusey

Confirmed 2010 All Good Music Festival Artists:
FURTHUR featuring PHIL LESH & BOB WEIR
Widespread Panic
Umphrey’s McGee
Yonder Mountain String Band
Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Band
Old Crow Medicine Show
Dark Star Orchestra
George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic
Keller Williams & the Added Bonus
Bassnectar
Femi Kuti & the Positive Force
Lotus
SOJA
Tea Leaf Green
Railroad Earth
Dr. Dog
Rebelution
The New Deal
The Bridge
Perpetual Groove
Garage a Trois
Everyone Orchestra
Cornmeal
The New Mastersounds
The Travelin’ McCourys
Fort Knox Five
Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/ Jeff Mattson
The Heavy Pets
Papadosio
Dr. Didg
Lee Boys
The Macpodz
The Pimps of Joytime

For the first time ever the All Good Festival will be offering a Four Day Pass. In addition to three days of music in the main concert area, this will include admission to the Thursday Throw-down on the Grassroots stage July 8 with Dark Star Orchestra, The New Deal, Fort Knox Five and more, plus an extra night of camping.


All tickets are on sale now through http://allgood.musictoday.com or charge by phone by at 1-800-594-TIXX. The Advanced 4-Day Passes (Thursday-Monday) are going fast and are currently available for $169, $55 off of the gate price.

For more on All Good see our 2009 review here.


Gathering of the Vibes 2010: Primus, Marley, Rhythm Devils

15th INSTALLMENT OF BELOVED FEST INCLUDES
PRIMUS, UMPHREY’S McGEE, JACKIE GREENE, RHYTHM DEVILS AND MUCH MORE

Gathering of the Vibes XV will take place July 29-August 1 at Seaside Park in Bridgeport, CT. The initial lineup is as follows:

Sunrise at GOTV 2009 by Dave Vann

Damian Marley & Nas
Primus
Jimmy Cliff
Rhythm Devils featuring Keller Williams
Umphrey’s McGee
Galactic
Jackie Greene
Robert Randolph & The Family Band
Steve Kimock Crazy Engine
Dark Star Orchestra
Little Feat
The Radiators
Martin Sexton & Ryan Montbleau Band
Mix Master Mike
Deep Banana Blackout
Big Sam’s Funky Nation
Assembly of Dust
Max Creek
New Riders of the Purple Sage
Zach Deputy
Harlem Gospel Choir
King For A Day
Donna Jean Godchaux

Sunday headliner and more acts to be announced!

“Way Advance” tickets are available here.

Check out JamBase’s 2009 GOTV coverage!


Dark Star Orchestra: Life After Dead

By: Jarrod Dicker

Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

“We are NOT the Grateful Dead,” professes Dark Star Orchestra‘s rhythm guitarist and vocalist Rob Eaton. “I think the main misconception is that we strictly copy the Grateful Dead’s music or somehow mimic their persona and none of that is true. We love this music, we live and breathe this music and when we step onstage there is no thought process of us trying to be or do anything except serve this music.”

Established in 1997, Dark Star Orchestra embarked on a single mission: reincarnate exact setlists from the Grateful Dead’s tour catalog which, throughout its 30 year existence, accumulated nearly 2,500 live performances. Dark Star Orchestra conveys these live performances by employing two distinct methods – a “recreation set,” where DSO mirrors a historical setlist of a genuine Grateful Dead performance, and the “elective set,” where the group generates their own setlist of Grateful Dead songs.

The tradition of Dark Star Orchestra’s pedigree is for members to adapt terminology and choral arrangements originally exhibited by the actual Grateful Dead. By doing this, they are able to familiarize the audience and transcend them spiritually to a nostalgic time when the Grateful Dead were an active, animate part of the rock & roll scene. Thus, rather than label themselves a “cover band,” DSO prefers a more accurate, incorporeal term.

“I say we are a spirit band,” Eaton explains. “We play the music in the spirit that it was originally conceived. The heart, soul, emotion and spirit of the music are the only things we can do to carry it through. It is impossible to copy a setlist exactly. You cannot recreate a show. You can play a setlist, but you absolutely can’t recreate it. That’s basically something that happens in the moment.”

Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

The group’s commitment to heavy improvisation goes all the way back to the formation of their band name. The Dark Star Orchestra moniker was chosen deliberately by founding members who believed that the Hunter/Garcia song “Dark Star” was the single most fitting piece to categorize the fundamental nature of the Grateful Dead. Meagerly including a sizeable verse/chorus arrangement, the song highlights the non-structure inventiveness of the Grateful Dead more than any other song in their extensive catalog. “Orchestra” was affixed onto the group’s name to communicate the obligation these artists felt to keep this music alive by communicating to the world the classic compositions of the Grateful Dead.

“The name ‘orchestra’ in our band is so apt because when you think about what an orchestra does, they’re recreating classical work,” DSO keyboardist Rob Barraco observes. “The difference is classical work is really orchestra, but we’re kind of approaching it in a similar way. We’re trying to be true to a particular era and sound, but by the very nature of what Grateful Dead music really is, you have to live in the moment of the music.”

In October 2008, the group performed its 1,600th career show. They are one of the only tribute groups that have achieved such heightened notoriety, having played major festival’s like Bonnaroo, Gathering of the Vibes and Summerfest, as well as nurturing a devoted nationwide following with a relentless touring schedule.

This past December, Dark Star Orchestra co-founder and lead guitarist John Kadlecik announced that he would be leaving the group after 12 years to join Bob Weir and Phil Lesh with their current project, Furthur. While this news initially stalled the DSO freight train in its tracks, the band kept playing on, electing Zen Tricksters founder and Donna Jean Godchaux Band guitarist Jeff Mattson to fill the “Jerry” role… for now.

Stu Allen by Susan J. Weiand

“There is another guitar player that we’re going to be taking out and touring with in April,” reveals Barraco. “It’s only to be fair, because you don’t want to simply choose one guy and then realize later that you made a mistake. So, we’re going to be going out with Stu Allen [JGB] and doing a whole West Coast tour with him. He’s a tremendous player, has a beautiful voice and a really nice sound. Then after we play with Stu, we will have a clear idea of where we’re going to go in terms of Kadlecik’s official replacement. We’ll see after we play with Stu in April what the final decision will be.”

The current touring DSO lineup includes Jeff Mattson, Rob Eaton, Kevin Rosen (bass, vocals), Lisa Mackey (vocals), Rob Koritz (drums), Dino English (drums) and Rob Barraco. As mentioned, Kadlecik was a founding member of the group along with the late Scott Larned, and his presence and veteran role in DSO most certainly will be difficult to replace. However, with the addition of Mattson, the band believes that he will not only be able to aptly fill the departed’s shoes, but also inject a new element into the group that they have never experimented with while Kadlecik was involved.

“John Kadlecik became a Deadhead a lot later than Jeff because of the fact that he’s younger,” Barraco states. “I think John’s real forte is playing more of the later ’70s and ’80s Grateful Dead. The one thing that Jeff has above everybody else is that he really understands the earlier bend on the Dead. The late ’60s, early ’70s. He does it so well and that’s something that we really haven’t concentrated on in this band until now. Jeff brings just a little more grease, that psychedelic greasy element that was missing in John’s playing. Not to demean John’s playing, because he’s brilliant. That’s just what Jeff brings that is different.”

John Kadlecik with Furthur by Susan J. Weiand

“[Mattson] comes at it from a place of its inception almost,” Eaton interjects. “He understands where it started and how it started and what it felt like when it started. He brings to the table a really deep understanding of what Jerry meant to this music in a pretty profound way that I didn’t realize until I started playing with him.”

Mattson’s comprehension and knack to play early renditions of Dead music has transcended the group to places they’ve never been before. A few weeks back, drummer Dino English and his wife welcomed a child to the world, which understandably prevented him from attending the opening week of tour. Dark Star couldn’t play a show that called for two drummers if only one, Koritz, was going to be present. So what did they do?

“We decided to do a whole string of Europe ’72 shows and recreate those concerts [these shows feature just drummer Bill Kreutzmann],” says Barraco. “Dark Star had never done that before, all that old Pigpen stuff. Jeff was just ripping it up. It’s been so psychedelic.”

The Europe ’72 shows were chosen by Eaton, who holds the chief responsibility of deciding the setlist for every DSO performance. He is a three-time Grammy Award winning producer as well as a former Grateful Dead taper who recorded throughout the late ’70s and early ’80s. He produced all of Pat Metheny‘s records for the past 20-25 years and has recently worked with Peter Wolf and Richard Bona. Joining DSO in 2001, Eaton had always selected setlist material with one “Jerry” in mind, John Kadlecik. Have any complications come about creating setlists to compliment their new guitarist?

“Nope, not at all,” Eaton confidently proclaims. “He did five shows with us in November, mid-tour, and I threw the gauntlet at him to see what he was made of. I gave him EVERYTHING! I gave him a show from ’89, and it had some stuff we’ve never even played before. There were some songs that John Kadlecik just didn’t want to learn sometimes. Certain shows would have a song called ‘California Earthquake’ that we never got around to doing. So, I threw that at Jeff – I said, ‘Learn this song. We’re going to do this exact show’ – right out of the box without any rehearsals or anything like that. I tested him right away and he passed all the tests with flying colors. At the end of the day, the exocentric components of a specific tone are all about the heart and soul of the music and what the emotional content of it is. The emotional content with Jeff is very strong. That I think, at the end of the day, is what Grateful Dead music is all about. It’s all about the emotion.”

Continue reading for more on Dark Star Orchestra…

 


John Kadlecik became a Deadhead a lot later than Jeff [Mattson] because of the fact that he’s younger. I think John’s real forte is playing more of the later ’70s and ’80s Grateful Dead. The one thing that Jeff has above everybody else is that he really understands the earlier bend on the Dead. The late ’60s, early ’70s. He does it so well and that’s something that we really haven’t concentrated on in this band until now. Jeff brings just a little more grease, that psychedelic greasy element that was missing in John’s playing.

-Rob Barraco

 

Photo of Jeff Mattson by Peter Wochniak

The duty of arranging the setlist night after night is no simple task, and none of the others envy Eaton’s role. On a nightly basis he must satisfy the desires of the crowd as well as those of his bandmates. He and he alone holds the vital judgment of whether to execute an “elective” or a “recreation” set.

Rob Eaton by Peter Wochniak

“I look at what we’ve done at a venue and go back to the last five times we played that city on tour. If we haven’t done one of our own setlists [elective] in four or five years, then we are due for one,” says Eaton. “I plot out what it is that we should be doing and then I start going through setlists to put the Rubik’s Cube together and make it all work. It’s quite a tedious process, but it keeps it interesting for us and gives the fans something different every time we come to town. They know they’re not going to see the same thing.”

The relationship between Dark Star and living Grateful Dead members is congenial. As mentioned, John Kadlecik left DSO to join Furthur. Jeff Mattson is the guitarist in the Donna Jean Godchaux Band and has co-written a song with Barraco on Phil & FriendsThere and Back Again. Barraco has played in The Other Ones, The Dead, RatDog and Phil & Friends. All remaining DSO members have either been involved with previous Grateful Dead affiliations or tribute groups, too. But it’s Barraco who had the grand opportunity to work side by side with a key Dead “member,” Robert Hunter. Meeting him while on a string of shows with Phil & Friends in 2001, Barraco humbly introduced himself to the lyricist and from that moment on a friendship bloomed. This segued to the production of a co-written studio album in 2007 titled When We All Come Home.

“We started talking about songwriting as a craft and I looked at him and said, ‘I got some stuff.’ He just stopped me in my tracks and said, ‘Send it to me, and let me hear what you’re doing.’ He gave me his address and I went back to my girlfriend at the time’s place in Portland and sat in the bedroom for days doing demos. I was so excited that Robert Hunter was going to listen to my music,” Barraco explains. “I sent him three songs, and three weeks later I got an email stating, ‘Your music is speaking to me.’ In that, he sent his phone number and said to give him a call in a week or so. So I called him up and he says, ‘Listen man, can you come down here to San Rafael? I got some really good stuff for you.’ I went down and visited him. I sat in his living room and he handed me these sheets of paper. In my head I’m listening to my music and reading his lyrics and I was just so blown away because he captured the spirit of it all – I basically did not have to do any editing with it, he did it perfectly. I looked at him, dumbfounded, and said, ‘Do you think you’re up for a little more?’ And he just said to lay it on him. After that, I just started sending him stuff and in a very short period of time it became an album’s worth of material.”

Dark Star Orchestra’s claim to fame with fans will always be their magical reincarnation of the Grateful Dead’s music. However, some original creative expansion is taking place removed from the Dead catalog.

Dark Star Orchestra by Peter Wochniak

“We’ve started working on an original project,” says Barraco. “We all live in different parts of the country though, and it’s hard for us to get together in the studio at given times. Rob Eaton is a Grammy Award winning studio engineer and [he's] just brilliant. He’s a brilliant producer and a brilliant recording artist. One of our drummers is a really good producer as well, and is really into recording. We all have Pro Tools on the road, so the way we do it is somebody comes up with an idea and we pass it around, see what one another could make of it. They’ll play a part and put a part down, and so on. So, we started working on that and so far it has been really cool. Unfortunately, John [Kadlecik] leaving the band sort of put a little monkey wrench in that for the time being, but whoever we end up with as our guitar player, they’re both down to do it.”

Dark Star has constantly had to deal with misconceptions about what they do. Dismissing the tag of “cover band,” the group feels that their mission and performance expands way beyond the generic label. Yes, they carry out a catalog of music created by another group, but it is in the spirit of the improvisations where they shine most uniquely. They do NOT think they are the Grateful Dead, and as Eaton puts it, they know damn well who they are.

“Here’s a great analogy I have used before,” explains Eaton. “Say I’m a painter and I have a setlist and this wood frame. The wood frame on this white canvas is the setlist, the order of the songs and the arrangements of the songs. All the colors and textures and patterns that get splattered on this canvas over the course of the night are the improvisations that differ on a nightly basis. I think that’s all we can do, to be true to ourselves and to be true to the emotional content of the music. We play it with heart and soul, and that’s really what the people get. People get the feeling. When you can transfer something you’re feeling into sound that someone else could hear and feel that’s a great thing. Jerry was really great at it. If we can tap into even a little part of that, that’s really what it’s all about.”

“We honor that music like Bach, Beethoven and Chopin because we think that this music needs to live on through the ages,” Barraco continues. “It’s incredibly important, it’s uniquely American, and we want to honor it that way. We want to approach it the same way they approached it. We want to take ourselves on that journey. By the very nature of doing that, we take the entire audience on the same journey.”

JamBase | Ridin’ That Train
Go See Live Music!

Dark Star Orchestra Tour Dates :: Dark Star Orchestra News :: Dark Star Orchestra Concert Reviews


DSO’s John Kadlecik Leaves/Replaced by Mattson

Dark Star Orchestra Guitarist John Kadlecik Leaves Band

And Will Be Replaced By Jeff Mattson For The Immediate Future

John Kadlecik by Weiand

Dark Star Orchestra guitarist John Kadlecik has announced he is leaving the band. Kadlecik recently joined Phil Lesh and Bob Weir‘s new band Furthur and one assumes Kadlecik will focus on that band now. For the immediate future, Jeff Mattson of the Zen Tricksters and Donna Jean Godchaux Band will fill in for Kadlecik.

The following note was posted on Dark Star Orchestra’s website:

Letter To The Fans

Posted on: November 16, 2009

Dear DSO Fan -

Thank you for joining us and being a part of this continuing, long strange trip these past 12 years. Your support and excitement for the music has kept us going strong for over 1700 shows. Throughout the years, we’ve had transitions both difficult and uplifting, yet the positive energy of our fan base has continued to propel our mission onward for performing this important music and for keeping this vibrant scene alive.


That said, we, as a band are entering another chapter in this story.


Dark Star Orchestra’s lead guitarist and one of its founding members, John Kadlecik, has decided to resign from DSO. John’s last show with us will be on Dec 5 in Buffalo. DSO is supportive of John’s choice and we wish him the very best.


Dark Star Orchestra will continue to bring you this music at its highest level. In our 12 year history we have gone through three drummers, three keyboard players, three bass players and numerous rhythm guitarists and we have always managed to keep improving the sound and the experience. We will be taking on a new player with his own talents and energy and turn yet another chapter in DSO history.

Veteran guitarist Jeff Mattson, of the Zen Tricksters and currently with Donna Jean Godchaux Band, will be joining us this week, on the New Year’s Run, Jam Cruise, and for our upcoming Winter Tour that begins in February. We assure you all the things you love about the Dark Star Orchestra experience will continue and we ask for your patience, friendship and positive energy as we keep truckin’ on…

Dark Star Orchestra

Dark Star Orchestra tour dates available here.


The Grateful Dead: Winterland, June 1977

THE DEAD SATISFY THE SAN FRAN FAITHFUL

Winterland, June 1977: The Complete Recordings Spotlights the Grateful Dead’s
Transcendent Three-Night Run in a Nine-Disc Boxed Set Remastered in HDCD

The Grateful Dead rolled into San Francisco riding a long streak of hot-damn shows during the spring of 1977, a legendary road trip that many Deadheads agree was a tour for the ages. The band didn’t disappoint the hometown faithful when it took to the stage June 7-9 at Winterland Arena – the Dead’s spiritual home – for one of the group’s most beloved hometown runs. As veteran Dead archivist David Lemieux puts it, “A lot of Deadheads say ’77 is their favorite year. And of these shows, the first night is a Top 15, the second is a Top 10, and the third is a Top 3.”

WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS packs every note from those three transcendent nights into nine discs that encompass what might be some of the greatest live Dead ever. A worthy successor to last year’s extraordinary Winterland 1973 collection, this set surges and sighs with the inspired sound of rock’s most unpredictable dance band hard at work, in peak communion.

WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977 is presented in HDCD, mastered from the original soundboard reels and enhanced using cutting-edge audio engineering technology including Plangent Processes’ state-of-the-art audio-time alignment procedure. Handsomely packaged in a custom archival box, the set contains 68 previously unreleased tracks as well as an extensive, full-color booklet featuring rare photos, a thoughtful essay by Rolling Stone senior editor and Winterland veteran David Fricke, and a few other surprise goodies.

On sale now exclusively from www.dead.net for $99.99, WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977 will be shipped by the end of September. Fans who order the set before then will also receive an exclusive bonus disc featuring more than an hour of unreleased music recorded live May 12, 1977 at Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre.

At the time of these recordings, the band included guitarist Jerry Garcia, singer Donna Jean Godchaux, keyboardist Keith Godchaux, drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, and guitarist Bob Weir.

WINTERLAND, JUNE 1977: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS

Track Listing

Disc 1: 6/7/77

1. “Bertha”

2. “Jack Straw”

3. “Tennessee Jed”

4. “Looks Like Rain”

5. “Peggy-O”

6. “Funniculi Funnicula”

7. “El Paso”

8. “Friend Of The Devil”

9. “The Music Never Stopped”

Disc 2: 6/7/77

1. “Scarlet Begonias”

2. “Fire On The Mountain”

3. “Good Lovin’”

4. “Candyman”

5. “Estimated Prophet”

6. “He’s Gone”

7. “Drums”

Disc 3: 6/7/77

1. “Samson And Delilah”

2. “Terrapin Station”

3. “Morning Dew”

4. “Around And Around”

5. “Uncle John’s Band”

6. “U.S. Blues”

Disc 4: 6/8/77

1. “New Minglewood Blues”

2. “Sugaree”

3. “Mexicali Blues”

4. “Row Jimmy”

5. “Passenger”

6. “Sunrise”

7. “Brown-Eyed Women”

8. “It’s All Over Now”

9. “Jack-A-Roe”

10. “Lazy Lightning”

11. “Supplication”

Disc 5: 6/8/77

1. “Bertha”

2. “Good Lovin’”

3. “Ramble On Rose”

4. “Estimated Prophet”

5. “Eyes Of The World”

6. “Drums”

Disc 6: 6/8/77

1. “The Other One”

2. “Wharf Rat”

3. “Not Fade Away”

4. “Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad”

5. “Johnny B. Goode”

6. “Brokedown Palace”

Disc 7: 6/9/77

1. “Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo”

2. “Jack Straw”

3. “They Love Each Other”

4. “Cassidy”

5. “Sunrise”

6. “Deal”

7. “Looks Like Rain”

8. “Loser”

9. “The Music Never Stopped”

Disc 8: 6/9/77

1. “Samson And Delilah”

2. “Funniculi Funnicula”

3. “Help On The Way”

4. “Slipknot!”

5. “Franklin’s Tower”

Disc 9: 6/9/77

1. “Estimated Prophet”

2. “St. Stephen”

3. “Not Fade Away”

4. “Drums”

5. “St. Stephen”

6. “Terrapin Station”

7. “Sugar Magnolia”

8. “U.S. Blues”

9. “One More Saturday Night”

Dead.net Bonus Disc

Auditorium Theatre — Chicago — 5/12/1977

1. “Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo”

2. “Dancing In The Street”

3. “Terrapin Station”

4. “Playing In The Band”

5. “Drums”

6. “Not Fade Away”

7. “Comes A Time”

8. “Playing In The Band”


Gathering Of The Vibes | 07.23 – 07.26 | CT

Words by: Andrew Bruss | Images by: Adam McCullough, Robert Chapman & Dave Vann

Gathering of the Vibes :: 07.23.09 – 07.26.09 :: Seaside Park :: Bridgeport, CT

GOTV 2009 by Vann

Bob Weir & RatDog, Buddy Guy, moe. and Crosby, Stills & Nash topped the bill at the 14th annual Gathering of the Vibes, but the lineup of any Vibes is only one side of a story that has to be experienced to be understood. Unlike the great majority of festivals, the Gathering Of The Vibes is more about the attendees than it is about the performers. Vibes is where friends are made, bonds are built and people literally fall in love. Wavy Gravy, the original hippie clown who MC’ed the event, as well as the original Woodstock, was asked what drew him to Gathering of the Vibes. “I found that the Gathering Of The Vibes is the one festival that I feel has the spirit of sharing and caring and helping each other out that was prevalent in the first Woodstock Festival,” he responded. “Various festivals have been after me, and somehow the timing was right, and I fell in love [with Gathering of the Vibes].

Throughout the course of the weekend, as an array of artists from genres of all kinds performed sets to an enthusiastic crowd, whenever folks were asked about the highlight of the weekend, it was always about the people, the place and the “vibes.”

Bryan Byrne of Cambridge, Massachusetts said his highlight was just “drinking beers, watching people, enjoying bands and just being here.” It was his second year coming to the Vibes and he said, “I would have come regardless of who’s playing. I don’t know a lot of the bands. I just come here for the atmosphere.”

Sunrise at GOTV 2009 by Vann

Joanna Trossbach of Richmond, Virginia brought her granddaughter to the event and told JamBase, “Everyone should try to make it here because of the beautiful location. Everyone has worked hard to keep it clean. The Port-O-Johns are the cleanest of any festival I’ve ever attended, and everything is wonderful. Everyone should try and come to Vibes.”

Although the event has changed locations several times over its 14 year history, Vibes returned to Bridgewater, Connecticut’s Seaside Park for the third year in a row. Many in attendance categorized Bridgewater as “ghetto,” and based on the shotgun shells washed up on the park’s ocean shore they weren’t far off. But even though the park is not known for being safe past dark, for the four days out of the year that Gathering Of The Vibes takes over the Deadhead mentality makes the public park a place that even a Virginia-based grandmother feels comfortable taking her granddaughter to.

Josh Schroder is a Bridgeport local who came to Vibes for the first time this year and he seemed to appreciate the influence GOTV had on his community. “The funniest thing about it all is here we are in the middle of the hood, unbeknownst to everybody, and this is not really where you want to hang out normally, but right now this is the place to fucking be. Bridgeport isn’t a place you’d want to raise a family or anything, but then you have this festival and what can you say?”

Thursday, 07.23

DSO :: GOTV 2009 by Chapman

Although a great deal of the event’s DNA revolves around community, you can’t forget that it always has been and always will be the music that draws people to the festival. Thursday was highlighted by performances from the Donna Jean Godchaux Band, as well as the ultimate Dead tribute act, Dark Star Orchestra, whose set was unfortunately cut short due to rain. When it rains, it pours, and as torrential downpours opened up on the early arrivals, ocean winds blew into the campgrounds, exacerbating the situation. This would normally put a damper on people’s time, but on the first night of the four-day weekend the conditions did nothing but provide campers an opportunity to rally together, seek cover under each other’s makeshift shelters and bond with their neighbors.

Fortunately, the rain let up in time for a late night performance on the Green Vibes Stage from The Machine, a Pink Floyd tribute band that was considered by many to be the best set of the day. This was the first year to feature the Green Vibes Stage, and throughout the weekend it hosted late night sets that proved to be among the most memorable of the weekend. Unlike Dark Star, who strives for authenticity, The Machine take subtle creative license with Floyd’s material, where songs like “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” and “Time” had audible differences from the studio versions. The set’s highlight was a version of “Pigs (three different ones)” that let frontman Joe Pascarell truly shine. Nailing the vocal style of Roger Waters and the guitar tone of David Gilmour, Pascarell went nuts on the talkbox guitar solo, making crazed faces that brought to mind Floyd’s mad founder, Syd Barrett.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of GOTV…

Friday, 07.24

Keller Williams :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

The sun rose early on Friday, and made enjoying JJ Grey & MOFRO that much easier. The Florida natives belted out powerhouse vocals, horns, guitars, electric organ and precise drums that brought the crowd down to alligator ally through MOFRO staples like “Orange Blossoms” and “Everything Good Is Bad.” Aside from his showmanship, the power and grit of Grey’s voice, in and of itself, is worth the price of a ticket, and his steady burn got the crowd good and ready for a set from Keller Williams and MDS.

Keller classic “Freaker By The Speaker” had people dancing hard, and Phish‘s “Birds Of A Feather” provided one of the groovier covers of the weekend. When asked about the differences between a MDS performance and a solo slot, Keller said, “It’s a totally different thing. I learned a long time ago that it’s impossible to please everyone. So, the most important thing in my world is to be happy and I’m happy on stage, and hopefully that comes across to the audience.” He added, “We [MDS] haven’t played since January. We’ve rehearsed but there’s this un-jaded vibe that we’re all bringing and we’re excited to play and listen to each other.”

George Clinton & P-Funk :: GOTV 2009 by Chapman

Keller’s set was followed by Vibes vets George Clinton and P-Funk, whose set was a shit show in all the right ways. With duel synth stations, seven electric guitarists, a handful of scantly clad back-up vocalists and a performance by Clinton’s granddaughter, things were very busy on stage and in the crowd. Clinton’s set didn’t offer up any new material, nor did it seem nearly as groundbreaking as his material proved to be in its heyday, but with a back catalogue like his Clinton can afford to ride the gravy train all the way to the bank. To be blunt, “We Want The Funk” proved one of the best songs to dance to over the weekend, and that said, he doesn’t have to “keep it fresh” to keep things funky.

From up close or afar, it was clear that Deep Banana Blackout‘s set had everybody in front of the stage dancing their collective asses off. The GOTV regulars have earned quite a reputation over the years and they didn’t disappoint. Carolanne McDowen of Worcester, Mass told JamBase that last year Deep Banana Blackout was one of the bands she went home having gained a new appreciation for, and this year they proved to be another highlight.

Rob Derhak – moe. :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

moe. was the night’s headliner, booked to perform for nearly three hours but were cut short due to thunderstorms. The band came out of the stable strong with “Not Coming Down” and managed to riff through a solid set. But with thunder a-brewin’ in the sky, the set had to come to a halt. Many fans commented throughout the rest of the weekend that moe. should have been allowed to finish up their set after the storm, but even after the rain halted a truly impressive display of atmospheric electricity continued to threaten from above.

Fortunately for all those who still had a funky monkey on their back, Lettuce brought the nitty-gritty grooves to the Green Vibes Tent for a late night show that made it impossible to stand still. With Eric Krasno and Neal Evans of Soulive fame on guitar and keys, Brotherhood Of Groove‘s Sam Kininger on sax and producer/drummer extraordinaire Adam Deitch on skins, to name a few, the stage was a who’s who of the neo-funk scene, and for a few hours, when most decent people were asleep in their tents, the hardest partiers were dancing their hearts and souls out to what had to have been the funkiest spot on the face of the earth for that short period of time.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of GOTV…

Saturday, 07.25

GOTV 2009 by Chapman

Saturday was the only day of the weekend that provided relief from the rain, and after two full days of festival conditions everyone seemed to let themselves go. Women went bare-chested with painted breasts (with some telling JamBase that they did not feel harassed) and one dude on stilts calling himself Tall Paul roamed the grounds, engaging festival-goers and giving everyone another story to bring home to their friends in the “real world.”

For as many folks tuned in, turned on and dropped out, there was one group of music loving attendees who were entirely on the ball. The Clean Vibes crew proved to be one of the greatest sources of pride Gathering Of The Vibes has to show the world. Kids from all backgrounds came to the event for the music, but throughout the course of the weekend “trash talking” volunteers directed people to dispose of their waste in the proper can, collected trash from the field and sorted out compost, landfill and recyclables with an on-the-radar presence that outdid their work at other festivals. Even Wavy Gravy noted the effort, saying, “For most of these people this is not their first festival. From one vibe to the next, they know the drill – they pick up the trash. There is an enormous effort to recycle, and you don’t see that at most shows.”

Bridgeport native Josh Schroder cited Big Moon‘s Saturday slot on the Green Vibes Stage as a weekend highlight. “The singer owns one of my favorite bars, Acoustic Cafe on Fairfield Avenue. There’s folks from all over the place. You’re from Boston, everyone is from all over, and to get people I know personally represented on the national scale is very cool.”

Levon Helm :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

Aside from Big Moon, the first half of the day was marked by a set from the Ryan Montbleau Band that had all the pretty ladies shaking it, and a Max Creek performance that Tom and Kasey Hunter from Sydney, New York cited as a highlight. “Max Creek was nice and relaxing,” Tom said. “It’s fun music. You can spin to it or move to it or watch it in the pouring rain.” Donna Jean Godchaux provided backup vocals on “Cassidy” and “Bertha,” and with guitarist Scott Murawski playing guitar for the Grateful Dead‘s Bill Kreutzmann in BK3 you can bet that his guitar tone rang rich with that Jerry Garcia groove that has come to be expected at Vibes.

State Radio canceled their performance the day of the event, and the promoters opted to allow all of the Saturday performers to have some extra time, rather than scramble to fill the void. And it was Guster, the band on the bill most likely to share their fan-base, that helped us forget all about State Radio with a nice taste of feel good rock. Guster seemed like one of the most unusual acts on the bill given their popularity with a mainstream, teenage demographic, but they synced up with the crowd better than a great deal of the “groovier” acts on the bill. They engaged the audience with spot-on banter and played on festival characters we’d all come across, and after an anti-encore tirade, citing the tradition as the lamest in the concert circuit, the group wrapped up on a positive note with their most well known single, “Fa Fa.”

Rob Bob Weir & RatDog :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

The Levon Helm Band followed Guster, but unfortunately, Helm was suffering from laryngitis and had his daughter Amy and guitarist Larry Campbell sing the overwhelming majority of the set. Bob Weir, who was slated to follow Helm, came out to lend a hand on The Dead’s “Attics,” “Tennessee Jed,” and The Band‘s timeless classic “The Weight” to close the set where Weir traded vocals with Helm for his only singing of the night. Although his lack of vocal contribution was disappointing one couldn’t help but commend the drummer for his perseverance in light of State Radio’s willingness to disappoint their audience.

For a festival that’s built itself around the community of The Grateful Dead, Bob Weir’s Saturday night slot was considered by many to be one of the most anticipated performances of the weekend. Joanna Trossbach of Richmond, Virginia saw him three times in nine days this year and thought that this set was better than the rest, and especially appreciated his help during Levon Helm’s performance. He opened with the appropriate “Festival” (which hadn’t been played since 8/24/2006 – 175 shows) and followed up with a solid “Jack Straw” that pulled in anybody who wasn’t already drinking the Kool-Aid. It was a mellower performance, and one attendee was overheard saying, “Bobby must have taken a Xanax tonight,” but a cover of “Iko Iko” that flowed right into “Drums” kept the evening’s pace mellow, yes, but consistent and coherent. A predictable “One More Saturday Night” closed the set, followed by an encore of “Ripple,” the former and latter featuring Vibes All Star Donna Jean on vocals. The setlist could have been better and the energy could have been higher, but having been on the road the past few months Weir sounded rehearsed and the instrumental components of the set were rather tight, and with folks trashing his previous appearance at the Vibes there was a sense of redemption in his show.

Continue reading for Sunday’s coverage of GOTV…

Sunday, 07.26

Grace Potter :: GOTV 2009 by Vann

Sunday once again brought the threat of a storm that was expected to bring hail and lightning, but the rhythm of John Brown’s Body kept the sun shining throughout the afternoon. Following the positive reggae vibe of John Brown’s Body, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals played into Buddy Guy, followed by the fest’s highlight, at least on paper, Crosby Stills & Nash. And while CSN was one helluva treat, the threat of a storm had plenty of folks packed up and gone before Potter graced the stage.

Grace Potter is one of the most promising up-and-coming female vocalists around, and you can tell by her stage presence that she’s well aware. Her beauty complements her talent, and her confident-not-cocky mentality always goes over well. Somber ballads like “Great White Gate” and “Apologies” gave the crowd something to sway with, and tunes like “Stop The Bus” and “Ah Mary” gave her fans something to rock out to. After telling the audience about her first Vibes experience as a 15-year-old Vermont native, she continued her set, trading off between an electric organ and a Flying V electric guitar, as she belted her way through covers of “Come On In My Kitchen,” a Robert Johnson nugget she picked up on the road with Gov’t Mule, and Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit.” The set concluded with a powerhouse “Nothing But The Water” that more than anything was a vehicle for Potter to display the full force of her vocal chords. She literally squealed like a schoolgirl as she hit the high notes before bringing the set to a close on a synchronized, hard hitting note, strummed over and over before a sudden halt.

Buddy Guy :: GOTV 2009 by McCullough

As could be expected, Buddy Guy fucking nailed it. Plain and simple. The man who Jimi Hendrix considered one of his major influences has continued doing his thing well into his golden years, and he does it better than a lot of the younger cats who strapped on a guitar over the course of the weekend. Guy has a “I’ve got your nose” goofiness to his stage presence and the sea of sun tanned faces consistently brought a smile to the legend throughout his 90-minute set. Tunes like “Hoochie Coochie Man” demonstrated his ability to shred the guitar, making spastic runs up and down the neck in a way that clearly showed where the anarchy in Hendrix’s playing came from. With the heat as strong as it was, Guy opted to sit the last song out, allowing a pre-teen named Quinn Sullivan to nail Hendrix’s “Voodoo Chile,” making it seem as though Guy was passing on the torch to a protege working on the licks of an icon who got so much out of Guy’s playing.

As the clouds grew gray and thick, folks were hoping weather would play nice until Crosby Stills & Nash finished the final set of the weekend. For as much condescending criticism can be written about geriatric rockers from the ’60s trying to cash in on dated material, CSN, more than most of their peers, have held onto the magic that made them what they are. The sharp, precise melodies they trademarked were spot-on, and the fest’s final performance was by far one of the weekend’s best, at least for those left to witness it. Opening with “Love The One Your With” got everyone singing along, and they followed up with songs like “Lady Stardust” and a “Dejà Vu” that featured some fresh instrumental rearranging. Add to that “Helplessly Hoping” and they made their mark on the audience before they had really gotten started. Choice covers of The Rolling Stones’ “Ruby Tuesday” and Bob Dylan’s “Girl From North Country” demonstrated the effort that went into putting the setlist together, and segueing from “Moonlit World” into Joe Walsh’s “Rocky Mountain Way” did nothing more than underscore the above sentiment.

Crosby Stills & Nash :: GOTV 2009 by Vann

Beyond their technical precision, what stood out was the strength of the group dynamic they’ve kept intact. Stephen Stills, still the Fender-slinging brain of the group, perfectly accompanied the Paul McCartney-esque British charm of Graham Nash, and even David Crosby was looking lively as ever, taking to his acoustic 12-string for “Teach Your Children.” They knew when to sing and when to let the audience take over for what proved to be a sing-along set, apparently by design. Although it seemed like “Teach Your Children” was slated to close the set before a hefty encore, the rain that was expected all afternoon finally arrived, and as Stills swung the neck of his guitar towards the ground, strumming out one final chord, lightning in the sky roared above us, almost on cue, as Wavy Gravy took the stage to let everyone know the show was over and to get to their cars asap because a severe electrical storm was coming.

If you’re thinking this review seems overly positive that’s because it is. RatDog may have been slow. moe. getting cut off early was a disappointment to many. State Radio dissed the crowd without much of an explanation, and it would have been great to hear Levon Helm’s voice had he been feeling better, but with Gathering Of The Vibes the performances themselves are just one component of a weekend that is more than anything about vibes. Keller said it best: “It’s a fantastic vibe, hence the name.”

And whether it came to the interactions amongst staff and patrons, performers and attendees, locals and visitors or campers and their neighbors, the feel good climate that has characterized Gathering Of The Vibes over the years was fully intact, perhaps more than ever, and it’s that Vibe that keeps drawing the same crowd back to the same event year after year.

You’re not going to see Phish and Bruce Springsteen make history at the Vibes, and you’re unlikely to see any big name reunion take place like Coachella has done so many times in the past. GOTV has found their niche, knows their audience and masterfully executed a weekend of great music, solid campground logistics and a communal atmosphere that fostered various bonds and connections that attendees will dwell on long after their ears stop ringing.

Continue reading for more pics of GOTV 2009…

Images by: Adam McCullough

Thursday, 07.23

Donna Jean Godchaux

Dark Star Orchestra

Friday, 07.24

Cornmeal

Allie Kral – Cornmeal

Chris Barron

King For A Day

JJ Grey

Keith Moseley with Keller & MDS

George Clinton

Deep Banana Blackout

Eric Krasno – Lettuce

Neal Evans – Lettuce

Al Schnier – moe.

Saturday, 07.25

Reid Genauer & Assembly of Dust

Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band

Pimps of Joytime

Ryan Montbleau

Scott Murawski – Max Creek

Levon Helm

Bob Weir & RatDog

Sunday, 07.26

John Brown’s Body

Grace Potter

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Harlem Gospel Choir

McLovins

Stephen Stills – CSN

CSN

Continue reading for more pics of GOTV 2009…

Images by: Dave Vann

Levon Helm

Guster

Buddy Guy

Lettuce

Perpetual Groove

Bob Weir & RatDog

CSN

Continue reading for even more pics of GOTV 2009…

Images by: Robert Chapman

Reid Genauer and the Assembly of Dust

Guster

Wavy Gravy

Ryan Montbleau Band

Reckoning

P.J. Pacifico

moe.

Lettuce

Levon Helm

Bob Weir with Levon Helm

Bob Weir & RatDog

Perpetual Groove

CSN

David Crosby – CSN

Wavy Gravy & Levon Helm

Wavy Gravy & Levon Helm

JamBase | Gathered
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