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Gov’t Mule | Red Rocks | Pics

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker

Gov’t Mule :: 09.04.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gov’t Mule cranked their amps up to 11 at Red Rocks at the band’s annual end of summer concert, where they were joined by The Avett Brothers and Truth & Salvage Co.. Mule lead singer, guitarist and bandleader Warren Haynes is a master at the guitar, having played with the Allman Brothers Band, The Dead, David Allan Coe and many more talented musicians, not to mention the dozens if not hundreds of musicians he has jammed with over the years. Along with Haynes was the rock solid Matt Abts behind the drum kit, Danny Louis on keyboard and even guitar for a few songs, and new bass player Jorgen Carlsson throwing down at Red Rocks. The first set started out rocking but settled into a mellow groove, if that’s possible for Gov’t Mule. When Haynes came out for the second set, he said, “This is the rock ‘n’ roll portion of the show,” as his guitar cut through the thin Rocky Mountain; a hypnotic sound you can close your eyes and really drift off to. Special guest Eric Krasno (Soulive, Lettuce) added his guitar chops in this set much to the delight of the Colorado crowd.

Gov’t Mule is heading to Oakland for a spooky Halloween show on October 30th, and before that making a stop in Las Vegas with their friends Widespread Panic for an intimate night of music at the Hard Rock’s The Joint on October 23rd .

Setlist
Set I: Railroad Boy > Gameface with Mountain Jam Tease, Patchwork Quilt, Child Of The Earth, Frozen Fear > D’yer Mak’er > Frozen Fear, Kind Of Bird, I’d Rather Go Blind, Soulshine with Gospel Intro, Broke Down On The Brazos
Set II: Steppin’ Lightly, Inside Outside Woman Blues, About To Rage > Electric Funeral Jam > About To Rage, Sco-Mule > with Eric Krasno, Oye Coma Va Tease & Dance To The Music Lyrics, Drums > High Jazz Jam > Endless Parade, Blind Man In The Dark
E: 21st Century Schizoid Man > We’re Not Gonna Take It > Dazed & Confused

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”15″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=129″);}); 9/4/10 – Gov’t Mule @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (Morrison, CO) View Photos

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Gov’t Mule: Mulennium

MULENNIUM OUT AUGUST 3; ’99-00 NYE SHOW FEATURES ORIGINAL MULE LINEUP, BLUES
LEGEND LITTLE MILTON AND THE BLACK CROWES’ AUDLEY FREED


Gov’t Mule

December 31, 1999 ushered in a new century and millennium and called for something truly magical – and that
night’s Gov’t Mule show at
Atlanta’s historic Roxy Theatre delivered it. What made this New Years Eve show so extraordinary? For starters,
Little Milton, one of Warren Haynes‘ most important influences, joins Gov’t Mule for six songs including “I
Can’t Quit You Baby” and “It Hurts Me Too.” Mulennium also marks the 10th anniversary of Allen
Woody’s death and is the first official release featuring the original Gov’t Mule trio issued since his passing.
Mulennium features Gov’t Mule’s original line-up: Warren Haynes on guitar, Matt Abts on drums
and the late Allen Woody on bass and contains many Mule covers played for the first time including The Black Crowes‘ “Sometimes Salvation”
and King Crimson‘s “21st Century
Schizoid Man.” Blues legend Little Milton and The Black Crowes’ Audley Freed join Mule for a spirited second set that
blazes into the wee hours of the new millennium.

The 3-disc collection was painstakingly remixed and mastered from the original master tapes. Mulennium
is out August 3 via Evil Teen.

Disc 1:
1. Bad Little Doggie

2. Lay Your Burden Down

3. Blind Man In The Dark
4. Life Before Insanity
5. Larger Than Life
6. Towering Fool 7. Countdown Jam 8. 21st Century Schizoid Man

9. We’re Not Gonna Take It
10. Dazed And Confused

Disc 2:

1. When The Blues Comes Knockin’*

2. My Dog And Me 3. Lump On Your Stump *
4. I Can’t Quit You Baby *

5. It Hurts Me Too *
6. Blues Is Alright *
7. Is It My Body? ** 8. Power Of Soul **

Disc 3:
1. Helter Skelter **

2. Sometimes Salvation **
3. 30 Days In The Hole ***
4. End Of The Line **
5. Out Of The Rain ****

6. I Shall Be Released *****

7. Simple Man ******

8. Crowd

*with Little Milton

**with Audley Freed
***with Audley Freed & Robert Kearns
****with Audley Freed, Johnny Mosier & Mark Van Allen

*****with Barry Richman, Robert Kearns, Johnny Mosier & Mark Van Allen
****** with Audley Freed & Mark Van Allen

Gov’t Mule
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Gov’t Mule: Island Exodus II

JANUARY 27-31 AT BREEZES GRAND IN NEGRIL, JAMAICA


Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule will host Island
Exodus II
. The event will take place over four nights from January 27-31, 2011 at Breezes Grand in Negril, Jamaica.

According to the Island Exodus website, Gov’t Mule will play 3 shows and Warren Haynes will play a sunset solo
show. Guest musicians including Ron
Holloway
(and more to be announced shortly) will sit in. The band is also offering a 6 night package, January
27-February 2 which will include a very unique “locals only” show in Negril on Tuesday February 1. All 6 night
packages will include tickets and round trip shuttle to this show.

Activities such as the Poster Signing, Danny Louis’ Golf Outing and Matt Abts’ Drum Clinic will also return alongside
new activities to be announced shortly.

All additional information can be found at www.mule.net/islandexodus.

Gov’t Mule
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Gov’t Mule | 01.15 – 01.19 | Jamaica

Words & Images by: Dino Perrucci

Gov’t Mule Island Exodus :: 01.15 – 01.19 :: Negril, Jamaica

Gov’t Mule :: 01.18 :: Jamaica

Gov’t Mule held its first ever Island Exodus at the all-inclusive Grand Lido Resort in Negril, Jamaica. The event featured three headlining shows from Gov’t Mule as well as a Warren Haynes solo show, three sets from Grace Potter and The Nocturnals, guests Ron Holloway (sax), “Mean” Willie Green (drums) and DJ Logic. The weekend fiesta also featured a golf outing, Drum Clinic with Matt Abts, road stories from Warren Haynes’ guitar tech Brian Farmer and much more.

With a stage located right next to the water on a beautiful sandy beach, the table was set for the experience of a lifetime. The Gov’t Mule sets throughout the weekend offered a great mix of songs from the new release By A Thread mixed with old favorites and island themed covers. Friday nights opener “Jam-Aica” > “The Joker” (Steve Miller cover) set the tone for what was to come. By the end of the set when Ron Holloway stepped out for “Dirty Work” (Steely Dan cover) and the set closer “Sco-Mule,” the beach was on fire.

Saturday night opened with a nod to local hero Toots Hibbert with a cover of the Maytals’ “54-46″ that led into “I’m A Ram.” The strong show was topped off with multiple guests joining for encores of “32/20 Blues” featuring Willie Green and Ron Holloway, followed by “Stop That Train” with Willie Green, Ron Holloway, Grace Potter and Nocturnals guitarist Scott Tournet.

Sunday evening featured a big Nocturnals set and two full sets of Warren Haynes solo. Though somewhat marred by rain and the ensuing sound problems, the show still provided some of the finest musical moments of the weekend. Monday night’s final set was one for the ages. High energy from the start, things really took off once “Rocking Horse” led into a “Beat It” jam with Warren ripping the Eddie Van Halen solo through the Jamaican night. “Beat It” also featured the stage debut of Sean Carlsson (Jorgen’s son) and his robot dance. The second set opened with Matt Abts on vocals leading the band through a cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Shattered” with Jorgen Carlsson on drums and Danny Louis on bass. It’s worth noting that over the course of the weekend Danny Louis, while usually seated behind the keys, also stepped out to play trumpet, guitar, bass and even joined Abts on Drums. The “Many Rivers To Cross” that opened the encore saw many goose-bumps and more than a few tears. I couldn’t help while standing there in paradise but to think for a moment that not too far away in Haiti there is a whole country with many, many rivers to cross. Ending the night with a rousing “Southern Man” (Neil Young cover), everyone walked away with big smiles on their faces.
In the end, fans and musicians alike seemed to agree that this was one of the most memorable times any of us have ever spent together.

Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Friday :: 01.15.10

Set I: Jam-Aica > The Joker, Thorazine Shuffle, Banks Of The Deep End, Larger Than Life, Have Mercy On The Criminal, Lay Your Burden Down, Steppin’ Lightly > Any Open Window, Dirty Work (w/ Ron Holloway), Sco-Mule (w/ Ron Holloway)

Set II: Find The Cost Of Freedom (w/ Grace Potter) > Ohio (w/ Grace Potter),
Take Me To The River (w/ Grace Potter), Brand New Angel, Broke Down On The Brazos, The Shape I’m In > Afro-Blue (w/ Ron Holloway), Lively Up Yourself

E: Raven Black Night, Gold Dust Woman (w/ Grace Potter)

Gov’t Mule

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Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Saturday :: 01.16.10

Set I: 54/46 > I’m A Ram, Gameface, Child Of The Earth, Frozen Fear, Beautifully Broken, Mule (w/ Ron Holloway) > I’ve Been Workin’ (w/ Ron Holloway) > Mule w(/ Ron Holloway)

Set II: Bad Little Doggie, Streamline Woman, Brighter Days > Like Flies > Drums >
Drums & Bass, Railroad Boy > Fallen Down > The Other One Jam with Gimme Shelter Tease (w/ Ron Holloway), Blind Man In The Dark with Get Up, Stand Up & Sleepwalk Teases (w/ Ron Holloway & Danny Louis on drums)

E: 32/20 Blues (w/ Willie Green & Ron Holloway), Stop That Train (w/ Willie Green, Ron Holloway, Grace Potter & Scott Tournet)

Artist Signing

Artist Signing

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Matt Abts Drum Clinic

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

Gov’t Mule

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Continue reading for lots more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Warren Haynes Solo :: Sunday :: 01.17.10

Set I: Patchwork Quilt, The Real Thing, Listen To The Lions, No Celebration, Back Where I Started, Stranded In Self Pity (w/ Ron Holloway), Change Is Gonna Come (w/ Ron Holloway), Goin’ Down Slow, Old Friends, Wild Horses (w/ Grace Potter)

Set II: Hallelujah Boulevard, Panonica’s Dream, It Hurts Me Too, Poor Boy Blues, In My Life (w/ Matt Abts), End Of The Line

E1: Hallelujah (w/ Danny Louis)

E2: That’s Why I’m Here > Stella Blue

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Warren Haynes Solo

Continue reading for more pics of Gov’t Mule’s Island Exodus…

Gov’t Mule :: Monday :: 01.18.10

Set I: Hammer & Nails > Time To Confess > Painted Silver Light, Wandering Child, Monday Mourning Meltdown > Forevermore > Rocking Horse > Beat It Jam (w/ Sean Carlsson on the dance floor & Ron Holloway), Reggae Soulshine (w/ Ron Holloway > Devil Likes Slow (w/ Ron Holloway

Set II: Shattered, New World Blues, Effigy > Folsom Prison Blues Jam > Effigy > Slackjaw Jezebel > Drums (w/ DJ Logic), Play With Fire (w/ Ron Holloway & DJ Logic), No Need To Suffer, Money (w/ Ron Holloway)

E1: Many Rivers To Cross (w/ Ron Holloway & Grace Potter), Somebody To Love (w/ Grace Potter)

E2: Southern Man (w/ Grace Potter & Scott Tournet)

Brian Farmer – Warren Haynes’ guitar tech

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

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Gov’t Mule tour dates available here.

JamBase | Jamaica

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Gov’t Mule: Any Open Window

By: Dennis Cook

Warren Haynes

Gov’t Mule‘s ninth studio album, By A Thread (released October 27 on Evil Teen Records), roars out of the gate with a steely intensity – helped along by “badass guitar” from pal Billy Gibbons (ZZ Top) – that’s helped define the hard rocking group since its inception in the mid ’90s. For all the excellent ballads and fruitful exploration – which has exposed influences as diverse as Robert Johnson, Prince and Radiohead – Gov’t Mule is frequently at their best when they play blessedly heavy. And that’s the predominant vibe on By A Thread, which captures the energy and intensity of their early power trio recordings but melds them to the bandleader Warren Haynes‘ ever-increasing songwriting acumen and the richer, broader palette of the current quartet configuration of Haynes (vocals, guitar), co-founder Matt Abts (drums), Danny Louis (keys, trumpet, guitar) and newest addition bassist Jorgen Carlsson, who joined in 2008. What shines through on their latest offering is a renewed Mule, serving up densely layered classic rock that truly honors their forebears by playing with passion, musicianship and compositional skill equal to the best in the long line that precedes them.

JamBase was able to wrestle a few minutes out of Warren Haynes’ very busy schedule for an informative chat about where Gov’t Mule finds itself today, as well as the challenges and perks of playing with The Allman Brothers Band and The Dead, and how those experiences help enrich his work with the Mule.

JamBase: By A Thread might be the most confident, clear record you guys have made, at least with the four-piece lineup.

Warren Haynes: It’s hard for me to be objective about it, but I kinda think that as well. I’m very proud of it; the whole band is very proud of it. Of course, we listened to it a lot while we were making it and then got away from it for a while. When I hear it now I still feel the same way about it. I was very happy with High & Mighty as well, but I feel this one expanded beyond that and [went] a little more towards where we’re headed in the future.

JamBase: It feels like the identity of the band with keyboards, post-Allen Woody really came into something on this record. It seems like internally you guys figured out what your statement of purpose was.

Gov’t Mule

Warren Haynes: Hopefully [laughs]. We were just flying by the seat of our pants and this is what happened. We went into the studio with Jorgen shortly after he joined the band, just to kind of force the issue and see what happens. The fact that it went really smoothly and productively and we were happy with what was going on and writing songs in the studio, it sort of galvanized the chemistry in a cool way that kind of advanced us to the next level really quickly.

There’s something about that ‘trial by fire’ sort of thing, where it can either be very instrumental or very detrimental in making you grow together.

It confirmed that we’d made the right decision.

I think Jorgen is tremendous with this band. He brings in a heaviness that’s reminiscent of Woody, and I couldn’t offer a bigger compliment.

Myself as well, and I think it’s a change we’re ready for now. I don’t know if we’d have been ready for it seven or eight years ago, but for whatever reason we’ve discovered each other now and it makes total sense.

How did you discover Jorgen? I think his entry surprised many of us who were largely unfamiliar with him prior to Gov’t Mule.

He was recommended to us by our mutual friend Jeff Young, who used to be in New York when I first came to New York and worked with me for a couple years when I first started putting musicians together in the New York area. Jeff left New York for Los Angeles to play with Jackson Browne, and he called one day and said, “I hear you guys are auditioning bass players and I think I might have the right guy.” We were putting together about a dozen bass players, all of which came extremely highly recommended from really close friends. So, the audition process consisted of us auditioning 12 really great people, and it was hard to choose because they all did an amazing job. But Jorgen brought the original spirit of the band back more than anybody we’ve played with since Allen. It sort of hit us like a bolt out of the blue, where it not only sounded like Gov’t Mule but the beginnings of Gov’t Mule.

I think I saw the Mule for the first time around 1996 and I was just floored by the thickness of the trio.

Yeah. That’s a good description [laughs].

Jorgen Carlsson by Willa Stein

It really took my legs out from underneath me. And I don’t think I’d ever conceived of one band playing Mississippi Fred McDowell and Black Sabbath covers in the same set before Gov’t Mule.

Our diversity as a crazy rock band was evident even then. I think it reflects all of our tastes in music. Individually, everybody’s taste is different but collectively there’s a huge overlap, which consists of an extremely diverse array of influences that need to be dealt with or showcased.

We did a few reggae influenced tunes even with Allen. We did a “Lively Up Yourself” that was a soft reggae version with a loud rock chorus. “I’m A Ram” goes back as far as when Allen Woody was alive. Those influences were always bubbling to the surface even in the ’90s. It maybe surprised some people when we went full-bore with Mighty High, but that was just something to do for fun and for the fans. It was never meant to be the follow-up to High & Mighty. I view By A Thread as the follow-up.

By A Thread also shows your continued growth as a songwriter. While I definitely enjoy you in multi-headed beasts like the Allmans and The Dead, it’s in Gov’t Mule that we get to hear your songwriting voice strongest, where we get to hear the way you spin a story.

To me, that’s a big part of the overall picture. I would never be comfortable in any situation – no matter how great the improv or musicianship is – if there wasn’t a story to tell. My affinity for singer-songwriters has been there from the beginning. When I was 14 I used to sneak into these folk clubs in Asheville, NC and met a lot of the folk musicians and singer-songwriters and was very influenced by that. So, as I was listening to rock ‘n’ roll, jazz and blues the singer-songwriter thing never came out of focus for me. Maybe it’s coming more into focus now more than ever.

One of the challenges with Gov’t Mule, for me, has been to keep the singer-songwriter thing as part of the picture but not dilute the original power trio that Gov’t Mule started as, while at the same time also not sounding like the Allman Brothers, The Dead or anyone else I’m associated with because that would be futile to write and record songs for Gov’t Mule that sounded like they belonged somewhere else.

Continue reading for more on Gov’t Mule…

 


Jorgen brought the original spirit of the band back more than anybody we’ve played with since Allen. It sort of hit us like a bolt out of the blue, where it not only sounded like Gov’t Mule but the beginnings of Gov’t Mule.

-Warren Haynes

 

I’m actually pretty amazed at your ability to compartmentalize identity in that way and keep these different worlds separate.

Warren Haynes by Willa Stein

It is quite a challenge, and there are a few songs that overlap and could go in several different camps. But for the most part it seems obvious to me which ones belong where.

What do you find happens for you as you move through these different camps? What do you carry over from one to another?

The projects I’m involved with tend to influence each other in some way. I always tell people when asked about the hectic schedule that I’d rather be this busy with two or three bands than one. It’s much easier to get burnt out if you’re doing the same thing all the time, but if you bounce back and forth it becomes a source of inspiration, all the musicians I’m surrounded by and constantly influenced by. When I leave one project and enter another I bring that energy with me.

You manage to maintain your own identity when you play with The Dead. You really don’t sound like Garcia, but you’ve found your voice within the material, particularly the ballads associated with Garcia, which were a real challenge for them after Jerry died.

It’s an opportunity for me to express myself differently and express different sides of my musical personality. It’s an opportunity that a lot of musicians don’t have and may, in some cases, lead to some frustration. If musicians in general had a complaint, maybe that complaint would be they get stuck only showing a certain side of themselves. Being able to jump around and do different things like this, I don’t have that complaint and it’s something I’m very grateful for because the way I play and sing in one band is different from the other, even if it’s not drastically different. It’s the same overall personality but I’m allowed to utilize different sides of that. That helps keep me fresh, as well.

Having all these different influences, like most musicians, is a pretty natural thing. I think audiences today – or at least the audience we have in the circles we run in – are more open-minded about that and don’t tend to compartmentalize and stereotype as much as in the past, hopefully.

Matt Abts by Willa Stein

I liken it to ’70s AM radio, where you could have Bruce Springsteen, Al Green and Bob Marley all in the same set of music.

When I was growing up FM [radio] was coming onto the scene, and one minute you heard Sly & The Family Stone and The Byrds and the next you heard Jimi Hendrix.

You placed on Rolling Stones100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time [Number 23, sandwiched between Mike Bloomfield (22) and The Edge (24)]. Is that a strange experience?

It is strange, and when I first found out about it I was very surprised. Our office got a call saying they were doing this list and I was on it, but they wouldn’t say where. I was very surprised to be on the list, and thought, “Well, great.” But, we had to wait till the magazine came out to find out where I was in rankings. It’s obviously not my list but I’m very honored to be on there.

This speaks to the idea that you are now an influence. You’ve been at this long enough that there’s people picking up guitars because of something they vibed with in your playing. What do you think you’re imparting to them?

Warren Haynes

Hopefully if someone is influenced by what I do part of that will be nodding back to where it all came from. As a guitar player, my style is an amalgamation of everybody I’ve ever listened to, and the people that are most important come out the most. But, it’s similar to what Gov’t Mule does as a band, where young people who may have never heard some of these influences have the opportunity to discover where a lot of this music came from, because it didn’t just come out of thin air.

I think it’s an unspoken responsibility. When I was learning how to play, I had my first few guitar heroes and I’d read interviews with those people and see who they listened to and listen to that list of people. So, it’s going backwards into a family tree. When you discover someone who was SO influential over so much music it’s eye opening. So, for me, someone like Albert King – who I don’t think was even on that list [editor's note: Nope, Albert wasn't] – in my opinion, and I’m equally a fan of B.B. and Freddy King, Albert is the blues guitar player who influenced rock more than anyone. My reasoning for saying that is he was a major, major influence on Hendrix. He was a major influence on Duane Allman and Clapton, and obviously, the biggest influence on Stevie Ray Vaughn. Just that in itself is an indication of Albert King’s impact. He’s the only one for some reason that I can never figure out where it came from before him. When I listen to everybody else I can trace the lineage but with Albert I never heard anyone sound like that before him.

It’s a joy to come across something truly unique, a fresh language to absorb and attempt to speak.

That’s what music is in the first place. Music has always been a form of expression, and when you trace it back to its earliest roots it’s about communication. So the fact that here we are thousands of years later using improvisation as a way of communicating with each other, it’s pretty amazing. I’m honored to be part of the enormous circle of people that speak that language.

In a recent article in Classic Rock Magazine, you called improvisation “instantaneous composition.” Inspired observation, because it isn’t just this freeform thing if handled properly. With talented improvisers you really are creating a unique piece of music on the spot.

That, to me, is the most gratifying. As much as I like composing, there’s something about being on the spot and composing on the spot that’s instant gratification. Look at somebody like Charlie Parker, who was an absolute master of that, and it’s equally important as someone like Mozart. You have to learn how to open yourself up and let the music come through without any blockage. And that’s something you can’t predict or force or depend on, but when it happens it’s the most rewarding experience imaginable.

Gov’t Mule will perform two nights at NYC’s Beacon Theatre for NYE followed by an Island Exodus in Negril, Jamaica. Complete Gov’t Mule tour dates available here.

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Widespread Panic Launches Porch Songs Series

Widespread Panic Launches Archival Porch Songs Series

Widespread Panic

Widespread Panic has just released the first installment of their archive Porch Songs series with the Mud Island ’97 run. This epic set of shows is now available for download at Live Widespread Panic.

Horace, the band’s archivist, has the breakdown of the shows and setlists from these two special performances July 18 & 19, 1997. Here’s what he has to say:

Happy Holidays everybody. Here we are with our first installment in the Porch Songs series… a two night run from Mud Island Amphitheater in Memphis, Tennessee on July 18th and 19th, 1997. Why these two shows you might ask? Well, these performances are somewhat of an intersection of what I think both you and I have been looking for… multi-night runs, soundboards released along with the WP Archive Multi-Track issues, and being able to fulfill some specific show requests. Porch Songs obviously gives us the platform to deliver on those angles… and do so more frequently. I felt that these two from Mud Island made the mark… a two-night run in a killer venue, a great collection of guest artists and a second set performance on 7/19 that was voted the best of 1997 by Honest Tune magazine back in the day. I certainly received many emails… even some from a few close friends… commenting on these shows and how they deserved some attention. So, a great starting point for Porch Songs… and certainly a basis for future comparisons. Next up? Well, I promised I’d head to the 1998-2002 era, so let’s go!

To order your copy of Mud Island 1997, please visit livewidespreadpanic.com and check out the Porch Songs category.

July 18, 1997

Set One: Glory, Ain’t Life Grand, Disco, Ride Me High, C. Brown, Pigeons, One Kind Favor, Papa Legba, Radio Child

Set Two: Makes Sense To Me, Dyin’ Man, Papa’s Home, Hope in a Hopeless World, It Was You, Fishwater, Nobody’s Loss, Space Wrangler, Drums, Stop-Go

Encore: Gradle, Red Beans, City of Dreams

July 19, 1997

Set One: Flat Foot Flewzy, Pleas, Let’s Get Down to Business, The Last Straw, Weak Brain Narrow Mind, Greta, Holden Oversoul, Pusherman, Henry Parsons Died*

Set Two: Tall Boy, Aunt Avis, Chilly Water, Jack, Rebirtha, Arleen, Drums**, Porch Song, Contentment Blues

Encore: Junior***, End of the Show****

* with Daniel Hutchins on vocals & Eric Carter on guitar

** with Matt Abts on timbales

*** with Warren Haynes on guitar

**** with Daniel Hutchins on vocals, Eric Carter on guitar, Warren Haynes on guitar


Gov’t Mule | 10.31 | Philadelphia

Words by: Jake Krolick | Images by: Jake Krolick & Allison Murphy

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31.09 :: Tower Theater :: Philadelphia, PA

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31 :: Philadelphia by Krolick

Chaos from the previous evening had yet to be stuffed back into the hole that it crawled out from. You could gauge the craziness of this year’s Halloween in several ways. One way was hop into the back seat of a cab early the next morning and find it filled with the putrid stink of an evening of over-indulgence and what appeared to be the remains of some spooky rice dish regurgitated in the vilest of manners. The cabby apologized in a heavy Indian accent saying, “Crazy night in the city man.” It’s the kind of evening you would imagine Mick Jagger and Keith Richards shared more than once in their heydays. I’m sure that the band members from Gov’t Mule had also danced with that kind of devil before, but you don’t hear about Danny Louis snorting his dad’s ashes cut with a line of coke. Sure, Warren Haynes is a stud on the guitar, but the ladies aren’t exactly tossing their panties at him like they did with Jagger. However, what Gov’t Mule lacked in quintessential Rolling Stones rock star unruliness they compensated for in their musicianship. It just made sense that Gov’t Mule covered the Rolling Stones when you listen to how deeply both bands are rooted in American blues and R&B. No, it was not quite the death defying genre leap heard at previous Halloweens, but their performance was well executed and Matt Abts take on “Shattered” was more fun than a barrel of monkeys!

Greene :: 10.31 by Murphy

The setlist onstage gave away the trick before the treat. Someone had created it and then changed their minds. Instead of waiting to cover the Rolling Stones during the second set at the Tower Theater, they jumped right in and played the second set first. We were treated to 12 first time played Rolling Stones covers spanning from the classic 1971 album Sticky Fingers to 1978′s Some Girls, and all that was around and in between. Lending Gov’t Mule a hand was guitarist/vocalist Jackie Greene and saxophonist Steve Elson. The set they unveiled proved that all of the musicians onstage were capable of handling multiple duties.

Haynes and Greene tackled the intricate Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood manner of weaving rhythm and lead guitar, while both clearly expressed their own stylistic flourishes. Greene took Keith Richards’ playing style and smoothed out the edges, while Haynes’ slide work was more a cross between Brian Jones and Ronnie Wood. Mule’s frontman was no Mick Jagger, and opener “Under My Thumb” lacked the song’s classic kick as the show took flight. Boundless pompous rock attitude and stage swagger did not suddenly emerge from the relatively subdued Haynes, whose first set was strongly played but found him staying out of the limelight while he let two of his bandmates strut their stuff. The haphazard beginnings fell away by the fourth song when Danny Louis traded spots with Greene for “Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’.” Louis played a raw, gutsy guitar that was cranked full blast as he shimmied back and forth between Haynes and bassist Jorgen Carlsson. His Richards-like leg bends, power chords, and plethora of rock & roll faces were just the catalyst needed to get the Tower shaking.

Greene was good for a backing vocal on “Angie,” as Haynes wrapped his patient tones around the chorus in his unique way of singing every word like each of us were a lone audience member and he was talking directly to us. Greene earned his keep on a majestic version of “Ventilator Blues” as he traded guitar licks with Haynes before switching gears to work the harmonica. The action shifted quickly as Louis traded trumpet blows with Greene’s harp and Elson’s sax. Louis’ hands never left the keys as they did a dirty dance that really knocked our boots around. By all accounts, it’s doubtful The Rolling Stones themselves sounded this good when they played the Tower in 2002.

Abts & Greene :: 10.31 by Murphy

By the middle of the first set all bets were off as Matt Abts ran out from behind his kit to play the role of Jagger on “Shattered.” Carlsson rotated into Abts’ spot on drums while Louis slapped the bass. Abts’ imitation of Mick Jagger was so fucking awesome that if you just caught one song all evening it should have been “Shattered.” Just seeing Abts do Jagger’s chicken strut back and forth across the stage in his tight white pants and black kneepads was priceless. Sure, his singing wasn’t perfect, but when he yanked a banana out of his crotch and sang, “Look at me, I’m in tatters,” we lost our shit. It was comedic and rocking all at the same time, and it showcased some seldom seen musical abilities within Abts, Carlsson, and Louis.

Gov’t Mule had teased “Play With Fire” the night before and they set aside their reggae take to keep the set steeped in the Stones’ classic rock sound. Greene’s added harmonies and Louis’ bravado on keys matched the hard-hitting bass pokes that Carlsson was tossing out. The Carlsson-era Mule has all the crudeness and excitement of the Allen Woody days without sounding like a step in reverse. The balcony was swaying and bouncing hard as Haynes steered us into “Paint it Black.” Drinks sitting on the edge of the balcony were actually sloshing in their cups. Haynes finished The Rolling Stones anthem with a simple shout to the audience, “This is what we call Mule-o-ween.” If only Abts had stepped back out for “Bitch” then that old outspoken lady of a song would have spread her legs wide and our costumed crowd would have charged right in. No matter, the second Haynes and Louis got their hands on “Brown Sugar” all was good as they faked an ending and gave us another round of house light flashes, arm waves, and sing-a-long (“I say yeah, yeah, yeah, WOOO!) to finish the set.

The cheers started to dissipate as we wandered through a sea of red and white Phillies garb. Those who chose to put the game aside and live in the moment of the concert were the lucky ones. Gov’t Mule’s new album, By A Thread (released October 26 on Evil Teen Records), was fresh on the record shelves as Haynes and crew dug through six tracks, including an extremely inspired “Monday Mourning Meltdown.” This new bit of Gov’t Mule peculiarity featured everything from Louis’ jazzy key work to Haynes’ thickly textured, head-throbbing guitar. He extended a peaking jam in around the fifth minute of the song that made me wonder where his wild, howling Gibson guitar had been earlier in the evening. His left hand bent the strings as his right played out some acrobatic fly swats that set the jam on fire. It was the first real face-scrunch I had seen from his lion-like mug all night.

Warren Haynes :: 10.31 :: Philadelphia by Krolick

The extended intro to “Blind Man in the Dark” had a bit of a Dr. John “Walk on Guilded Splinters” echo, complete with Louis’ eerie, Thriller-like sound effects. This was the longest, most experimental jam of the evening, and even though its predecessors would be more talked about, it featured some of the best playing buried within its well-constructed walls. Abts switched the grip on his drumsticks and started a snazzy little shuffle on his cymbals as Louis and Elson worked out a stellar bit of bebop that ached to be a new fangled Peanuts theme song. The backset trio ripped the center of the song clear out and jazzed up the jam proper.

“Going Out West” could have been spotted from miles away with its familiar, flamboyant sounding low end intro. Haynes’ Peter Gunn tease was just more candy in the bag as he pummeled costumed fans with the Spy Hunter theme song. The crowd that had been perched out in the hallways watching the game now raced back in for the colossal encore as a cover of T. Rex‘s classic “Bang A Gong” launched us back into raucous Halloween fun. It wasn’t a Rolling Stones cover, but the Chuck Berry inspired ditty fit well inside that realm of inspiration that drove The Rolling Stones. The transition back into “Going Out West” rumbled as Gov’t Mule sent us out with a huge finale to another memorable Mule-o-ween filled with love and hope and sex and dreams.

Gov’t Mule :: 10.31.09 :: Tower Theater :: Philadelphia, PA

Set I: (full set with Jackie Greene) Under My Thumb*, Monkey Man*, Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo*$, Can’t You Hear Me, Knockin’*$, Angie*, Ventilator Blues*$, Shattered*$ (with Matt on lead vocal, Danny on bass & Jorgen on drums), Wild Horses, Slave*$, Gimme Shelter*$, Play With Fire, Paint It Black*, Bitch*$, Brown Sugar*$

Set II: Steppin’ Lightly, Broke Down On The Brazos, Railroad Boy > Monday Mourning Meltdown > Forevermore, Frozen Fear > Brighter Days > Blind Man In The Dark$

Encore: (Encore with Jackie Greene) Goin’ Out West$ (with Peter Gunn tease) > Bang A Gong (Get It On)$ > Goin’ Out West$

* 1st Time Played
$ with Steve Elson

Continue reading for more images of Mule on Halloween…

Images by: Jake Krolick

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Gov’t Mule Island Exodus: 1/15-1/19 Negril, Jamaica

Gov’t Mule Island Exodus: January 15-19 Negril, Jamaica


Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule has announced The First Annual GOV’T MULE ISLAND EXODUS, taking place at The Grand Lido Negril Resort in Negril, Jamaica, January 15 through the 19 (4 nights).


Grand Lido Negril is a SUPER-INCLUSIVE resort, meaning that all meals and beverages (including top shelf liquor), as well as non-motorized water sports, scuba diving, airport to resort ground transportation & all gratuities are included.


This event will feature three full-length Gov’t Mule shows and a Warren Haynes solo show on the beach just steps from the ocean. The band will be bringing some special guests with them, such as long time collaborator Ron Holloway on saxophone, and DJ Logic will be spinning nightly in the Atlantis nightclub.

In addition, the long weekend will feature unique activities with Gov’t Mule and its extended family, such as:



-Poster Signing w/ Gov’t Mule

-The Gov’t Mule Invitation Golf Tournament Hosted By Danny Louis *

-True Roadie Stories w/ Brian Farmer

-Matt Abts Drum Clinic

-Farmer Sez

-The “Crew-lywed” Game featuring members of the GM road crew

-Gov’t Mule On Stage & Off Photo Exhibit – Featuring the photography of Chris Rushin & Lance Eubanks

* Will require an additional Greens Fee

Reservations will begin on Tuesday July 28, and early bird pricing will run through August 15. More information, including prices, cabin levels & payment options can be found at www.mule.net/islandexodus.