RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘furthur’

Furthur: Summer Tour

Furthur Announces Summer Tour

FurthurPhil Lesh, Bob Weir, Jeff Chimenti (RatDog, The Dead), John Kadlecik (DSO), Jay Lane (RatDog) and Joe Russo (The Duo, Bustle In Your Hedgerow) – have announced a Summer Tour. In addition to previously announced festival appearances the band will hit a number of outdoor venues along the East Coast. Furthur is on tour now.

Furthur

Furthur Tour Dates

02/26/10 Fri Mohegan Sun Casino Uncasville, CT

02/27/10 Sat Mark G Etess Arena Atlantic City, NJ

03/02/10 Tue Auditorium Theatre Chicago, IL

03/03/10 Wed Auditorium Theatre Chicago, IL

03/05/10 Fri 1st Bank Center (Formerly The Odeum) Broomfield, CO

03/06/10 Sat 1st Bank Center (Formerly The Odeum) Broomfield, CO

03/08/10 Mon Portland Memorial Coliseum Portland, OR

03/12/10 Fri Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco, CA

06/25/10 Fri Highland Bowl Rochester, NY

06/26/10 Sat MCU Park Brooklyn, NY

06/27/10 Sun MCU Park Brooklyn, NY

06/29/10 Tue Penn’s Peak Jim Thorpe, PA

06/30/10 Wed LeLacheur Park Lowell, MA

07/03/10 Sat Gelston Castle Estate Mohawk, NY

07/04/10 Sun Nateva Music & Camping Festival Oxford, ME

07/05/10 Mon The Green at Shelburne Museum Shelburne, VT

07/08/10 Thu Artpark Lewiston, NY

07/09/10 Fri All Good Festival @ Marvin’s Mountaintop Masontown, WV

07/10/10 Sat Mann Center for the Performing Arts Philadelphia, PA

Furthur Tour Dates :: Furthur News :: Furthur Concert Reviews


Nateva Adds: Furthur, moe., KW

Nateva Adds: Furthur, moe., Keller Williams & More

Furthur

Nateva Festival has announced a number of additions to the summer music and camping event. Furthur, featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir, will headline the Festival and perform on Sunday, the 4th of July and moe. will be the Friday night headliner. The previously announced Flaming Lips set will be featured as the Saturday night headliner. For those weekend campers who wish to come early, Lotus will headline the Thursday night festivities. Plus, The Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, Zappa Plays Zappa, Keller Williams and Moonalice will all perform this summer in Oxford, Maine. Dozens more bands to be announced in the coming weeks. Tickets on sale now.

The Nateva Music & Camping Festival is a three-day, multi stage outdoor camping event to be held July 2, 3 & 4 at the beautiful 100 acre Oxford Fairgrounds – 2 hours and 25 minutes from Boston and 45 minutes from Portland, Maine.


All Good Initial Lineup Furthur, WSP, UM, YMSB

All Good Festival Initial Lineup: Furthur, Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee, Yonder Mountain String Band, Dark Star Orchestra, Femi Kuti

The initial lineup for the 14th annual All Good Music Festival has been announced. Set for July 8-11, the fest will once again take place in Masontown, West Virginia from the heights of Marvin’s Mountaintop featuring over 40 bands with no overlapping sets allowing fans to see every set and every band on the lineup.

Initial All Good Artist Announcement:

All Good 2009 by Pusey

FURTHUR (featuring PHIL LESH & BOB WEIR)

Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee

Yonder Mountain String Band

Dark Star Orchestra

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic

Lotus

Femi Kuti & the Positive Force

Railroad Earth

The New Deal

Rebelution

Perpetual Groove

Cornmeal

Fort Knox Five

The Macpodz

Stay tuned for many more acts to be announced!

Tickets On Sale Friday February, 19 at 12:00 EST.

Buy early and save with New 4 Day Passes and Early Bird Tickets! For more on tickets and all details, go to www.allgoodfestival.com.

For more on All Good see our 2009 review here.


Furthur | 02.05 & 02.06 | Florida

Words by: Andrew Wetzler | Images by: Susan J. Weiand (not from this show)

Furthur :: 02.05.10 :: Bayfront Park Amphitheatre :: Miami, FL Florida

Phil Lesh & Bob Weir – Furthur

Bobby, Phil and team let Miami know that on Super Bowl weekend, they meant business, too. On the first night of their tour, fresh off RatDog‘s residency in Negril, Jamaica, Furthur brought an energy into the show that matched the pulse of an already hyped town.

Just down the street from where Phish wreaked havoc five weeks ago, Furthur ran through a varied setlist that introduced both the band and a packed audience to Miami’s newest outdoor venue, Bayfront Park Amphitheatre.

Seeing both Bobby and Phil onstage was a refreshing sight. They seemed to be enjoying the spotlight together. What made the occasion even more unique was the vigor that their bandmates brought to bear. Joe Russo, a drummer with a highly improvisational style evidenced through his work with The Duo, set the pace, and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti was solid as always. Sunshine Garcia Becker and Zoe Ellis, the two women singing backup, seemed quite gifted, though never really had a chance to roll up their sleeves.

The decision to invite John Kadlecik to perform as “Jerry” worked surprisingly well. The philosophical significance of this move should not be underestimated. Warren, Bruce, Joan, Chris, etc. have all brought a respectable persona to the music, and to their credit none have tried to sing “like Jerry.” Kadlecik, by contrast, has made his living and reputation by “being Jerry” with the Dark Star Orchestra, a band he co-founded in 1997.


That Bobby and Phil would bring Kadlecik into the fold says a lot about their willingness to place the music and the audience above their personalities and anyone’s vision of what the Grateful Dead was. Kadlecik noted on his website in mid-November, “Most of you know by now that Phil Lesh and Bob Weir have asked me to play with their new band, Furthur. Needless to say, this was a great honor.” He played and sang like a wide receiver that just got called up from the Arena Football League and was determined to make the most of his opportunity.

The evening flew by even though we were there for a good while. The band seemed to be relishing the moment and never seemed to be in a rush to hurry songs or head off into the night. That is not always the case with South Florida shows. In many instances, South Florida is either the first or last night of a tour for bands, due to geographical considerations. Opening nights are notoriously rough and tour-ending shows quite often reveal an exhausted bunch ready for some R&R. Friday night was neither. Instead, this Miami audience was treated to a finely polished evening of music.

Furthur :: 02.05.10 :: Bayfront Park Amphitheatre :: Miami, FL Florida

Set I: Jam > Born Cross-Eyed > The Music Never Stopped, Ramble On Rose > Golden Road to Unlimited Devotion, Dear Mr. Fantasy > On the Road Again > Franklin’s Tower
Set II: Jam > Throwing Stones > Viola Lee Blues > Mason’s Children > Viola Lee Blues > Good Lovin, Lady With a Fan > Terrapin > Shakedown Street, China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider
E: Ripple

Continue reading for coverage of the next night in Orlando…

Words by: B. Getz | Images by: Susan J. Weiand (not from this show)

Furthur :: 02.06.10 :: Hard Rock Live :: Orlando, FL

Overheard from a father to his son after this show: “It’s about fucking time these boys remembered who they were.”

Furthur

Hustling as we traversed thru Universal Studios City-Walk in downtown Orlando, a new kind of American Beauty was on display. Modern westernization in the form of Vegas-like chintzy recreations of several things American circa 2010; a Latin Quarter, a full-on RATM cover-band, high end NYC-centric clubs, a KISS karaoke bar blaring “Rock And Roll All Nite” and lastly, NBA City, located next to the Hard Rock Live, which played host to Furthur on a brisk Saturday evening. We crossed the artificial moat and came upon hordes of ticketless miracle seekers; Orlando was definitely a tough score, and this writer lucked out shortly before we left for the venue.

Viewing the many new generation heads pouring around the front, I recalled stories of the Grateful Dead’s 1994 appearance in Orlando, when the police unleashed a series of tear gassings on many unsuspecting Deadheads. Those old enough to remember were a bit surprised the boys would book another gig in this city, as the horror stories still ring from the incident, and it was referenced by a few older cats over the course of the night.

I found myself decidedly on middle ground this evening. I was lucky enough to catch the Grateful Dead with Garcia a handful of times through my teens, enjoying the ride for the final few stops between 1992-95. This audience, however, was divided primarily between many older heads who had experienced dozens if not hundreds of shows, and a newer generation of kids whose exposure to the “Greatest Songbook on Earth” is through the myriad of post-Garcia offerings, be it Phil & Friends, RatDog, The Other Ones, The Dead, Dark Star Orchestra, etc.

Russo & Weir – Furthur

The venue was an anachronism for the surrounding scene, an intimate, one-room theater with classic royal balconies and a huge general admission floor. The acoustics were pristine and the security almost non-existent once the show began. The closeness and feel of the music hall betrayed its decidedly corporate, music-by-the-numbers underwriting.

Nonetheless, when Furthur took the stage and swiftly opened with the obligatory “One More Saturday Night,” all seemed right in the world. Tearing thru the rocker, Bob Weir immediately assumed the frontman role and wildly led the band through a lively “OMSN,” his hot-pink Ibanez juxtaposed against his aging-cowboy aesthetic with a humorous twist.

The band then delved into a bustling “Bertha,” and right off the bat guitarist/vocalist John Kadlecik unveiled a cherry guitar tone and youthful vocal exuberance. The rollicking frolic through “Bertha” allowed the band to find its footing and lock in on a few grooves, with Kadlecik singing from the axe and heart. The mics cut out at some point between songs, but Weir and Phil Lesh chatted heartily from the stage with several in the crowd.

Cowboy Weir then directed the boys into “The Race Is On” with a countrified flair that showed another early example of the diversity within this collection of players. But, it was the next selection that really allowed the band to show its true colors. “It Must Have Been The Roses,” delivered with stately elegance, had tears welling up for many during this emotional evening. Kadlecik found a snug approach to deliver the poignant lover’s lament with a bit of Garcia’s subtleties and weeping axe tone. Drummer Joe Russo‘s swift, swinging beat pushed the song a bit harder then usual, giving it a real big band flair. Zoe Ellis and Sunshine Garcia Becker added fantastic vocal harmonies from rear stage left.

John Kadlecik – Furthur

Weir then commandeered the stage for “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” the Dylan chestnut, where Bobby was demonstrative lyrically and in motion. The first of many hearty sing-alongs, percussionist Jay Lane augmented Russo with soft restraint as Phil displayed the first of several shit-eating grins as he built the walloping crescendo. “Masterpiece” was a choice slice of charged up ’80s GD, with keyboardist Jeff Chimenti getting his Brent Mydland on with big, bright ivory tickling. Weir was his quirky self, offering signals and peculiar looks while Kadlecik worked huge bends and great tone to the delight of the now firing Hard Rock Live crowd. Phil clearly got off hard because he and Weir shared a joyous high-five at the song’s conclusion. We roared!

“Rubin and Cherise” displayed even more incredible work from Chimenti, mimicking Vince Welnick-era sounds but taking it deeper. This seemed the one tune of the set where they were not methodically TIGHT, and that served the song well, with the band freewheeling along by the seat of their pants and communicating through looks, nods and winks. Their level of attention and communication made it clear this wasn’t a canned nostalgia run. Russo had the David Kemper moves down, pulsing along and bringing the beat up and down with verve, while Kadlecik shone brightly through more glorious channeling of Garcia’s magical tones. By the end of “Rubin” he had massaged any reservations older heads may have been holding about his inclusion. Again, one couldn’t hold back their emotions as this rarity was dropped on our unsuspecting heads after a very Bobby-centric start.

“Deep Elem Blues,” while solid, allowed the heads to catch their proverbial breath as Weir donned the hollow-body and took the lead, allowing Chimenti more Hammond action before directing the band to the set ending “Deal.” For all of us who have sat through ordinary versions of this tune or skipped it entirely for whatever reason, tonight’s performance excused any of these crimes. “Deal” was chock-full of wonderful interplay between Chimenti and Kadlecik, shared vocals from Bob and John (and Weir botching vocals), never-ending rave-ups, and driving rhythms from Lane, Russo and Lesh boosting the song to new heights.

A lengthy set break ensued, where I took in the magnitude of this experience. It really was strangers stopping strangers, a free flowing exchange of ideas and stories that spanned three generations and thousands of miles. For the older couple in front of me, veterans of 200+ shows, they were at once enraptured by the set and worried about the enthused youngster between us who may have had too much of something but was currently levitating blissfully. A Bay Area veteran named Andy, who also had a couple hundred shows under his belt, was asking all kinds of questions about Russo and The Duo. It was a righteous give and take; listening, learning and sharing in this joyous recreation of a truly revered catalog delivered for souls both old and new. This was an inspirational, if lengthy, set break.

Joe Russo – Furthur

A bulbous Lesh funk rumble and absolutely nasty Russo stomp announced “After Midnight” in its glorious JGB variation to start set two. Phil was up and down the now LED-illuminated fretboard with untamed, ecstatic runs reminiscent of ’77 “Dancins.” Russo was DRIVING this charged rocker, somehow aggressive and funky behind the beat, no doubt the product of his cerebral, kinetic lockstep with Lane. The drummers’ aural kinship and playing gave the tunes a unique spice all evening. Yet, the obvious star of “Midnight” was Kadlecik, who channeled a Bicentennial Keystone tone and proceeded to destroy the J.J. Cale-penned burner with screaming licks that upped the ante with every bar. This was a lengthy grooveathon that had it all and launched the second set skyward.

“Next Time You See Me” came out of nowhere, a hard left turn whilst still in the zone as they transitioned to the R&B Pigpen stomp. Chimenti again colored the blues royal with howling Hammond and dirty piano runs. Older heads seemed charged by this song choice, shouting along to Weir’s hooting vocals.

The cleanly plucked, reverb drenched, snapping guitar ascension that announced “Althea” was like a nuclear blast of energy; a time-traveling stroll back to 1982 with intoxicating Lesh, Kadlecik, and Chimenti interplay giving the song an even funkier undercurrent then it naturally possesses. Again, Kadlecik rose to the occasion with otherworldly Garcia licks that had serious tears falling. His deadpan Garcia vocals were almost too-much to handle, except he wore this huge smile as if he could not believe he was immersed in this magic thing, and that joy transmitted through his words and hands in a way that allowed us to get down with reckless, blissful abandon. Just when it couldn’t get any better, John clicked on the Mu-Tron and the Hard Rock Live began levitating.

Phil Lesh – Furthur

Phil unveiled the beautiful intro to “Cryptical Envelopment,” and then proceeded to sing it with grace and beauty. The band followed suit, playing in a way reminiscent of the late ’60s incarnation of the early song. A brief but blatant “Dark Star” tease gave way to the otherworldly “Wharf Rat.” A tall order for Kadlecik, he accepted the challenge with honor. For this writer, it is the definitive Garcia ballad, a cathartic exercise almost unparalleled in the canon. Kadlecik’s humble, watery-eyed rendition was moving and magnificent. His “dreams do come true” expression worn proudly, his vocal and guitar delivery were impeccable. The power of the song, the story, and the Fat Man shining down on JK; a truly gut-wrenching and inspirational reading that transfixed us.

Lesh and Russo silenced the band, and then constructed a monstrous “Fly Away” coda that was the evening’s emotional crescendo, with the audience belting the divine refrain with a gleeful enthusiasm that was as infectious as the music itself. Soaring Garcia style leads filled the outro, and the band sped into a segue that veered towards “Spanish Jam” and possibly “Just a Little Light” before Phil revisited the “TOO” rumble, setting up the bomb as Russo stoked the flames with rim shots and meticulous stick work.

In uncorking an unholy “The Other One,” Phil played the intro more powerfully than I’ve ever heard. Upon detonation, “The Other One” was like a runaway train full of uncompromising furious rhythms and Kadlecik’s wailing, psychedelic bolts from above. This was a fully executed, cryptically enveloped engine barreling with force, a la 1968.

Weir took it back to the bus for which this glorious endeavor has been christened, eulogizing Cassady, Kesey, Graham, and Garcia in one fell swoop, leaving only a smoking crater in his wake. The power and electricity behind this roaring “TOO” was palpable and transmittable. I think I speak for most of the building when I say we propelled into the stratosphere with this enormous rendition. Phil then brought things to a hush like a mad-conductor, and reentered the serene “Cryptical” ending with aplomb. Skull fucked we were.

Bob Weir & John Kadlecik – Furthur

As we tried to wrap our heads around the 40-minutes we’d just enjoyed, Kadlecik’s dreamy tones danced above a focused, spinning undercurrent. Aided by Lane’s soft, machine-like flourishes and a dalliance between Phil and Russo, the band succeeded in bringing it down to Earth, somewhat. Ellis and Becker’s stunning vocals rose above “The Wheel” with grandeur, their harmonies iridescent above John and Phil’s sonic telepathy, which sent the building back into orbit. Russo and Kadlecik shared some great lyrical instrumental interplay, too. Russo, a consummate professional and veteran of a cache of diverse collectives, was never a Deadhead prior to Furthur, yet vigorously served the songs with purpose and nuance. Kadlecik, as we know, is a lifelong Deadhead and made his bones emulating Garcia with the Dark Star Orchestra. Yet here they were, flanked by an absolutely giddy Phil Lesh and an astonished Bob Weir. What a scene to behold!

A spirited run through “Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad” felt like some good ol’ Grateful Dead, and arrived at a heavenly “And We Bid You Goodnight.” The emotional quotient again reached mammoth proportions, as Phil, John and Bobby all sang their hearts out, with the ladies enhancing these beautiful tones exponentially. Elation abounded, and we were blessed with an extended campfire sing-along to close the set.

A brief but thorough “U.S. Blues” might have been the lone, nondescript encore, but the boys presented a sensitive, yet high-spirited “Touch of Grey” to close the show. The song’s eternal resonance was not lost on this adoring, decade spanning crowd united in a shared passion for this illustrious songbook and the greatest American rock ‘n’ roll band ever birthed.

I could not have asked for anything else from this final song, an emotive scamper through the first sweet song I heard Garcia sing to me, rocking my 13-year-old soul on that fateful March night in 1992.

Happy 70th Birthday Phil, and God Bless The Grateful Dead!

Furthur :: 02.06.10 :: Hard Rock Live :: Orlando, FL
Set I: One More Saturday Night, Bertha, The Race is On, It Must Have Been the Roses, When I Paint My Masterpiece, Reuben and Cerise > Deep Elem Blues > Deal
Set II: After Midnight > Next Time You See Me, Althea, Cryptical Envelopment > Wharf Rat > The Other One, The Wheel > GDTRFB > And We Bid You Goodnight
E: U.S. Blues > Touch of Grey

Furthur tour dates available here.


JamBase | Sunshine State
Go See Live Music!


Phil Lesh’s 70th Bday Celebration

Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday Celebration

Phil Lesh

On Friday March, 12, Furthur will celebrate Phil Lesh‘s 70th birthday with a special concert billed as “Furthur & Friends” at the Bill Graham Civic Center in San Francisco, CA. The show will be a benefit for the Unbroken Chain Foundation, which will donate all proceeds to Haitian Earthquake Relief. GDTSToo mail order starts 1.16, MusicToday online sales start 1.18 at 9 a.m. Public on sale starts 1.22 at 10 a.m. PT.

Phil Lesh was born on March 15, 1940 in Berkeley, California.

For more on Furthur, see our NYE review here.


Furthur | 12.31 | San Francisco

Words by: Garrin Benfield | Images by: Susan J Weiand

Furthur :: 12.31 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Furthur :: 12.31 :: San Francisco

If you have not yet seen Furthur, this is what you need to know: This is a living, breathing band capable of rocking, spacing, and generating some serious psychedelic boogie. I think it’s safe to say that everyone inside the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium on New Year’s Eve felt blessed to once again be able to celebrate this high holiday of improvisational rock & roll with color, class, and amidst musical performances that seriously did right by the Grateful Dead’s legacy.

Setlists aside, the story of this band is certainly John Kadlecik (pronounced Kad’ luh sik), clearly the most unapologetic Jerry-influenced member of any of the official post-Garcia projects. But Kadlecik just might be the best thing to happen to “The Dead” in years. I will admit to some serious ambivalence about the idea of inviting a sort of “mimic” into what I always assumed would be a relentlessly forward looking endeavor – the continued reinterpretation of the Garcia/Hunter catalog – until I realized that what JK’s presence does is continue a tradition of musical searching with sincerity and intensity while also scratching the itch of having someone in there who really knows the internal architecture of Jerry’s playing.

Perhaps what JK enables Phil and Bobby to do is to play like themselves again, to truly shine while utilizing the unique skills they built over 30 years – skills that were primarily used for the purpose of artfully darting around Jerry’s world-class improvisational flights. That’s not to say I have not enjoyed, to degrees, the contributions of all the post-Jerry lead guitarists that have been brought into the fold. I will say I was partial to the nimble, sunny, Strat-toned grace of Jimmy Herring, which seemed to me to best embody both the gravity and light-footedness of Garcia. But unlike even Herring, I would say JK knows these songs as well as anyone, including Phil and Bobby – minus, of course, the experience of their composition, recording, and the accompanying memories of years of performance.

Weir & Kadlecik :: 12.31 :: San Francisco

And that leads me to what might be the strangest part of watching Weir take cues from JK (yes, he did LEAD the band at times). I wondered if the so-close-it’s-scary Garcia guitar tone and vocal affectations might send the old-timers into some serious dejà vu, or if the simpatico might also encourage a kind of complacency from Weir and Lesh, as it subconsciously reminded them of shows, tours or years that were not particularly inspired. Luckily JK lent a genuine enthusiasm to the proceedings, and a knowledge so deep and reverent that I think his contribution is resoundingly positive. It took me a while to come to this resolve (really over the course of both NYE shows, 12/30 and 12/31), as I am still most drawn to, and intrigued by, the “authentic gestures” of Dead music; meaning the two guys in this band who have become, in my estimation, much more than footnotes in history as individual musicians, but more like historically significant improvisational voices: Weir and Lesh. I believe this is true not only for their association with the Grateful Dead, but because of their wholly unique approaches to guitar and electric bass, respectively.

On that note, rest assured that Phil was as clear-headed and powerful as ever on that strange Ritter bass of his, and Bobby remains one of the coolest “rhythm” guitar player, not just in rock & Roll, but maybe ever, switching between his pink Strat, (that some older heads will remember from 88-89, I believe it was his first MIDI-equipped axe), his Gibson hollow body (circa 1974) and the blue Modulus with the lightning bolt sound holes. The addition of Joe Russo on drums also cannot be underestimated, as his most direct, powerful playing retained a certain swing and finesse, and his interaction with longtime RatDog drummer Jay Lane frequently upped the energy level significantly. This drum duo does not have the volcanic power of The Rhythm Devils, but lends the band a certain flexibility that comes with having just one full drum kit and one percussionist. Jeff Chimenti, by now a very familiar face in this scene, remained his ever reliable self, playing all the right things almost always, and taking a few piano solos that brought the house down. The other new faces onstage were two female singers who lent pretty harmony and background vocals to many songs on both nights. This being a fairly dense band, however, their contributions were frequently overshadowed or undermixed.

Phil Lesh :: 12.31 :: San Francisco

The first half of the first set on New Year’s Eve felt like an old school Dead show, when songs were not all necessarily connected by long segues. We were able to ease into what was going to be a long evening with combustible versions of “Shakedown Street” and “Jack Straw.” The mid-set “Candyman” was a full-room sing-along, with Kadlecik referencing the shimmering rotary-speaker sound that Jerry almost always used on that tune. “Viola Lee Blues” cracked wide open into a far ranging jam, and was the evening’s first nod to what must seem to many like the ancient history of The Dead. The “Truckin’” that followed and closed the set was perfectly mid-tempo, allowing the climactic jam at the end to truly build, accented by the evening’s first real Phil thunder. A fantastic beginning. It was also really fascinating to listen to JK utilize different Jerry tones that we associate with disparate eras in the course of one tune, from slinky Europe ’72 Fender to the mid rangey MIDI-distortion of a ’93 “Slipknot!”

Speaking of, the next set slammed wide open with a precise, sharp “Help” > “Slip” > “Franklin’s” that joyously brought the room together, and what followed was, with just a few exceptions, a gorgeously drippy psychedelic excursion through “Cassidy,” “The Wheel,” “Dark Star” and perhaps most notably, Pink Floyd’s “Time” from Dark Side of the Moon. Unfortunately, this bold and inspired choice also contained the night’s first major misstep, namely, Phil’s vocal take, which was marred by pitch problems and that oddly square sense of rhythm he often applies to his vocal phrasing. But the love in the room was so palpable at this point that no one seemed hung up on nitpicking, and we just continued flowing through a lovely “Uncle John’s” and another surprise, “After Midnight,” delivered by JK with the fervor of an early 80s JGB version. What a nice relief to have him lead the band through an exploratory set with truly narrative guitar playing, not separate, unrelated paragraphs of notes, but entire jams that felt as if they were one gesture, or breath.

Furthur :: 12.31 :: San Francisco

The entire New Year’s moment (or minutes) seemed as delightfully disjointed and weirdly paced as any of the old BGP celebrations, with multiple layers of events going on simultaneously, including the New Year’s baby rising out of a red fog-drenched cave, and then riding a very glam-inspired silver skull with red sequined eyes over the floor, while Father Time, children holding large DayGlo flowers, and (if I remember correctly) a collection of wood-nymph like creatures spread around the stage – all to the tune of The Beatle’s “All You Need is Love.” The countdown to 2010 sped by, balloons dropped, and everyone hugged and just hung out for a few minutes taking in the roar of the crowd and the crazy scene around us. The next segment of music got underway not with the expected “Sugar Magnolia” but a perfect “Golden Road to Unlimited Devotion” that has been modernized and given some extra muscle, with an added rave-up at the end that seemed to take the place quite nicely of a “Sugar Mag” jam.

The entire third set was a marvel not just for the incredible energy expended, but for the inspired song choices, especially “Let it Grow,” which was as stately and majestic as it’s ever been, particularly recontextualized as a New Year’s letter between band and audience. The “Cryptical” > “Other One” > “Cryptical” suite was pulled off with a panache that always seemed to elude The Dead. The ballad slot was occupied by a gorgeous “So Many Roads,” and the whole thing was brought to an enormous conclusion with what was probably a half hour’s worth of “St. Stephen,” “The Eleven” and “Not Fade Away.”

Lesh, Weir, Russo :: 12.31 :: San Francisco

After a few minutes of explosive appreciation from the packed house, Phil returned to the stage alone and said, “Well, Happy New Year to you, too!,” which elicited another whole resounding level of heartfelt cheers. Bobby then led the band into a charged “Sugar Magnolia” encore (for the setlist geeks out there, a very unusual placement, but I think the band knew they couldn’t get outta there without playing that!) and the evening came home perfectly and gracefully.


There has been a not oft-recognized bit of anxiety running through The Dead scene in recent years about whether the band is losing relevance – as evidenced by the many conversations I overheard about whether the Bill Graham Civic was sold out or not. For years, even when The Dead and the scene were routinely disparaged in the mainstream press, heads could at least lean on the fact that “their” band sold out every show in every venue they played, and was continually the top-grossing live act in the country. I can tell you this: On the 30th, all but a VERY few upper tier seats were taken, and on New Year’s, the place was packed to the gills. More importantly, on both nights, NO ONE left these shows until the last note!

I get a little misty reflecting on years of New Year’s throwdowns, a tradition virtually invented by Bill Graham and The Dead. Watching the younger kids file stonily out of the venue with glazed, satiated looks, I was reassured that this music still communicates something essential, still allows the channeling of some energy that flows through the roots of the Haight-Ashbury and into deep space, and still needs to be performed in large darkened halls of dancing fools – sober, tripping, young, old, graceful, rude, beatific and impatient. And I was reminded, proudly, that this band and this scene, albeit in a calmer, more diffuse stage, still gives any other contemporary act a run for its money. This was not just another jam band New Year’s show, this was one more deep reminder of the cultural importance of the Bay Area, and how lucky we are to celebrate it together once again.

Download this show now!

12.31 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Set I: Shakedown Street, Jack Straw, Mama Tried, Candyman, Loose Lucy, Viola Lee Blues, Truckin’

Set II: Help On The Way > Slipknot! > Franklin’s Tower, Cassidy, The Wheel > Dark Star > Time > Uncle John’s Band, After Midnight

Set III: Countdown to Midnight > Golden Road > Let It Grow > Cryptical Envelopment > Born Cross-Eyed > The Other One > Cryptical Envelopment > So Many Roads, St. Stephen > The Eleven > Not Fade Away

E: Donor Rap, Sugar Magnolia

Continue reading for more pics of Furthur on NYE…

JamBase | San Francisco

Go See Live Music!


Furthur Add Mill Valley Shows To Bay Area NYE Run

Furthur Add Mill Valley Shows To Bay Area NYE Run

Furthur

Furthur has announced a pair of pre-NYE shows. The band – Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Jeff Chimenti (RatDog, The Dead), John Kadlecik (DSO), Jay Lane (RatDog) and Joe Russo (The Duo, Bustle In Your Hedgerow) – will perform at Mill Valley, CA’s Masonic Hall on December 27 and 28. Tickets are available here. Following the Mill Valley gigs, Furthur will ring in 2010 with two shows on December 30 and 31 at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA.

Complete Furthur tour dates available here.


And check our recent photo gallery of Furthur in New York here.


Furthur | 12.08 | New York

Images by: Allison Murphy

Furthur :: 12.08.09 :: Hammerstein Ballroom :: New York, NY

FurthurPhil Lesh, Bob Weir, Jeff Chimenti (RatDog, The Dead), John Kadlecik (DSO), Jay Lane (RatDog) and Joe Russo (The Duo, Bustle In Your Hedgerow) – began their December run on Tuesday at New York’s Hammerstein Ballroom. Here’s what went down.

Set I: Truckin > Dire Wolf > Doin That Rag > Ramble On Rose > Reuben and Cerise > Looks Like Rain > Cosmic Charlie

Set II: King Solomon’s Marbles > He’s Gone > New Potato Caboose > The Other One > Days Between > Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain > Cold Rain and Snow

E: Touch of Grey

Furthur is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | The Fillmore
Go See Live Music!


Furthur To Play Odeum CO Grand Opening on 03/05 & 03/06

FURTHUR WILL PLAY GRAND OPENING OF THE ODEUM COLORADO MARCH 5 & 6, 2010

Furthur

The Colorado metro area’s newest entertainment gem, The Odeum, was formally unveiled December 3. On grand opening weekend, March 5 & 6, 2010, Furthur featuring Phil Lesh and Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead will officially open the venue.

Tickets go on sale Saturday, December 10 and can be purchased here.

About The Odeum Colorado:
Odeum Colorado is a re-launch and remodel of the former Broomfield Event Center, right off Highway 36, just 15 minutes from both Denver and Boulder. Colorado is blessed with some wonderful venues; however, the metro area has needed a great mid-sized venue set up primarily for live music with the ability to host non-music events as well. The Odeum Colorado, scale-able from 3500 to 6500 attendees, configures for a myriad of different events. The Odeum Colorado is perfect for intimate performances by superstars and just as perfect for up and coming bands to take their next step as their careers grow. To create the venue Colorado deserves, we brought together the best and brightest minds to remodel the facility into a warm, inviting and fun venue.

The patron experience starts with the environment and our mission for the Odeum is to create the best environment for a mid-sized hall in America. The venue expects to host between 50 and 100 events per year and continue to grow every year. Attractions will include other non-musical events like one-off sporting events, family entertainment shows, non-profit and charitable events as well as some events hosted by the city and people of Broomfield.

About Furthur:
Grateful Dead members Phil Lesh and Bob Weir are embarking on a musical adventure with their new band Furthur. The 24 date tour begins February 5 in Miami, Florida and will find Lesh and Weir revisiting some of the same historic venues where the Grateful Dead performed back in those thrilling days of yesteryear: Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, VA, Barton Hall at Cornell University, Shea’s Performing Arts Center in Buffalo, NY, Auditorium Theater in Chicago, and Radio City Music Hall in New Your City.

Fans can expect Lesh and Weir to push the musical envelope with jaw-dropping improvisations and loving renditions of Grateful Dead classics, with an all star band that includes keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, percussionist Jay Lane (RatDog), drummer Joe Russo (Benevento/Russo Duo, Trey Anastasio), and guitarist John Kadlecik (Dark Star Orchestra). New and old fans of the Grateful Dead will be entranced as Phil and Bob take the musical journey “furthur,” exploring some of the Grateful Dead’s most beloved songs in a tour that promises to keep the feet stomping and the bodies shaking.

Complete Furthur tour dates available here.


Furthur: Massive Tour Announced

Furthur: Massive Tour Announced

FurthurPhil Lesh, Bob Weir , Jeff Chimenti (RatDog, The Dead), John Kadlecik (DSO), Jay Lane (RatDog) and Joe Russo (The Duo, Bustle In Your Hedgerow) – has announced a new set of tour dates kicking off February 5, 2010 in Miami, FL and concluding March 8 in Portland, OR. And as previously announced, the band will celebrate NYE with two shows at San Francisco’s Bill Graham Civic Auditorium on December 30 and 31. Details below.

In other Further news, the band played a surprise mini-gig last Friday night (November 20) at the intimate 19 Broadway in Fairfax, CA. Here’s the setlist from that show:

Bob Talks About “Standing Waves,” Hey Jude, Terrapin Station, Help On The Way > Slipknot! > Franklin’s Tower

E: Good Lovin’

Setlist from: philzone.com

Further Tour Dates

Furthur :: 09.20.09 :: Oakland, CA by Weiand

12/08/09 Tue Hammerstein Ballroom New York, NY

12/09/09 Wed Hammerstein Ballroom New York, NY

12/11/09 Fri Oakdale Theatre (Formerly Chevrolet Theatre) Wallingford, CT

12/12/09 Sat Convention Hall Asbury Park, NJ

12/13/09 Sun Convention Hall Asbury Park, NJ

12/30/09 Wed Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco, CA

12/31/09 Thu Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco, CA

02/05/10 Fri Bayfront Park Amphitheatre Miami, FL

02/06/10 Sat Hard Rock Live Orlando, FL

02/08/10 Mon The Tabernacle Atlanta, GA

02/09/10 Tue Thomas Wolfe Auditorium Asheville, NC

02/10/10 Wed Bojangles’ Coliseum (Formerly Cricket Arena) Charlotte, NC

02/12/10 Fri Hampton Coliseum Hampton, VA

02/13/10 Sat Patriot Center Fairfax, VA

02/14/10 Sun Barton Hall Ithaca, NY

02/15/10 Mon Stabler Arena Bethlehem, PA

02/17/10 Wed Sheas Performing Arts Center Buffalo, NY

02/18/10 Thu Verizon Wireless Arena Manchester, NH

02/19/10 Fri Mullins Center Amherst, MA

02/20/10 Sat Utica College Utica, NY

02/22/10 Mon Bob Carpenter Center Newark, DE

02/23/10 Tue Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

02/24/10 Wed Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

02/26/10 Fri Mohegan Sun Casino Uncasville, CT

02/27/10 Sat Trump Taj Mahal Atlantic City, NJ

03/02/10 Tue Auditorium Theatre Chicago, IL

03/03/10 Wed Auditorium Theatre Chicago, IL

03/08/10 Mon Portland Memorial Coliseum Portland, OR


Furthur NYE in San Francisco Lesh, Weir & More at Bill Graham

Furthur New Year’s Eve & December 30 at San Francisco’s Bill Graham Civic Auditorium

Furthur :: 09.20.09 by Weiand

Furthur, featuring Grateful Dead legends Phil Lesh and Bob Weir with Jeff Chimenti, Joe Russo, John Kadlecik and Jay Lane will perform a two-night NYE run on December 30 and 31 at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA.

Furthur: Lesh, Weir, Chimenti, Kadlecik, Lane, Russo

December 30 & 31

Bill Graham Civic Auditorium

San Francisco, CA

Doors: 6:00 / Showtime: 7:30 p.m.

All Tickets General Admission

**12.31 Will Be A Special Three Set Show**

GDTSToo MailOrder Presale – 1st Postmark 10.17-19

MusicToday Presale 10.19 @ 9 a.m. PT -> 10.23 @ 3 p.m. PT

Presale Tix Above Available While Supplies Last

Outlet Onsale Starts 10.25 @ 10 a.m. PT

For pics of Furthur in California go here.

Furthur has a few dates scheduled for the East Coast prior to NYE; complete dates available here.


Furthur | 09.20.09 | Oakland

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Furthur :: 09.20.09 :: Fox Theater :: Oakland, CA

Set I: Samson & Delilah, Casey Jones, Mississippi Half-Step, Sugaree, Pride Of Cucamonga > Jam > Throwing Stones > Passenger

Set II: Viola Lee Blues > Cumberland Blues > Viola Lee Blues, King Solomon’s Marbles, Cassidy > Jam > Dark Star > Welcome To The Dance (first time played – new Phil song) > Dark Star > Uncle John’s Band, Sugar Magnolia

E: Cosmic Charlie

Furthur is Phil Lesh (bass, vocals), Bob Weir (guitar, vocals), Jeff Chimenti (keys, vocals), John Kadlecik (guitar, vocals), Jay Lane (drums, percussion) and Joe Russo (drums).

JamBase | Oaktown

Go See Live Music!


Furthur: Dec Northeast Dates

GRATEFUL DEAD LEGACY CONTINUES

FurthurPhil Lesh, Bob Weir , Jeff Chimenti (RatDog, The Dead), John Kadlecik (DSO), Jay Lane (RatDog) and Joe Russo (The Duo, Bustle In Your Hedgerow) – have announced five new shows in the north east in December.

December 8 & 9
Hammerstein Ballroom
New York City, NY
Doors: 6:30 / Showtime: 8:00 PM

December 11
Chevrolet Theater @ Oakdale
Wallingford, CT
Doors: 6:30 / Showtime: 8:00 PM

December 12 & 13
Asbury Park Convention Hall
Asbury Park, NJ
Doors: 6:30 / Showtime: 8:00 PM

GDTSToo MailOrder 1st Postmark 9.26

MusicToday Online Starts 9.29 @ Noon ET

Outlet Onsale Starts 10.10 @ 10 AM ET


Lesh, Weir, Russo, Lane, Chimenti:
New Group “Furthur” for Sept.

Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Joe Russo, Jay Lane, Jeff Chimenti and John Kadlecik

Form New Band “Furthur” / Set Dates For September


Phil Lesh

The Dead‘s Phil Lesh and Bob Weir have formed a new band with drummer Joe Russo (Benevento/Russo Duo), guitarist John Kadlecik (Dark Star Orchestra), as well as Weir’s RatDog bandmates Jeff Chimenti (keys) and Jay Lane (drums). The new band has taken the name Furthur.

As of now the band only has three dates set for September, 18-20 at Oakland’s Fox Theater.