RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘St. Stephen’

Halloween Setlists Wrapup

Happy Halloween!

As reports from the weekend are still
trickling in, here’s a wrapup of some noteworthy Halloween setlists from across our
musical universe. If you know of any setlists we’re missing, please feel free to help the
cause and add them to the story comments and we’ll update the list.

Phish 10/31/2010, Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, NJ

Set 1: Frankenstein, Big Black Furry Creature from Mars, Ghost -> Spooky, The Divided Sky,
Roses Are Free > Funky
Bitch, Boogie On Reggae Woman, Stash, Character Zero

Set 2: Little Feat’s “Waiting for Columbus” Album: Fat Man in the Bathtub, All That You
Dream, Oh Atlanta, Old Folks
Boogie, Time Loves a Hero -> Day or Night, Mercenary Territory, Spanish Moon, Dixie
Chicken -> Tripe Face Boogie,
Rocket in My Pocket, Willin’, Don’t Bogart That Joint, A Apolitical Blues, Sailin’ Shoes,
Feats Don’t Fail Me Now

Set 3: Down with Disease > Back on the Train > Gotta Jibboo, Camel Walk, Suzy Greenberg,
Wilson > Harry Hood >
The Horse > Silent in the Morning, You Enjoy Myself

Encore: Julius

From Phish.net: Notes | Download


Widespread Panic 10.31.2010 | Lakefront Arena | New Orleans, LA
Set 1: Faries Wear Boots > Big Wooly Mammoth > Worry, Machine > Barstools & Dreamers,
Visiting Day, You’re Gonna Miss Me, Disco > Diner > Porch Song

Set 2: Lola, Pilgrims > Tall Boy > Rock, Swamp > Use Me, Strange Times > Drums > The Other
One jam > Jack, All Time Low, Bring It On Home

Encore: Christmas Katie > Superstition > Fishwater

From: PanicStream.com | Notes


The Disco Biscuits 10/31/10, Charlottesville Pavilion, Charlottesville, VA
Set 1: One Of These Days1, Shem-Rah Boo > Digital Buddha > Moshi Fameus > Catalyst > On
Time >
Confrontation

Set 2: Strobelights and Martinis > Cyclone > Little Betty Boop > Bombs > Abraxas5 >
Gangster > I-Man
Encore: Portal To An Empty Head

From Phantasy Bisco:
Notes


Umphrey’s Mcgee 10/31/2010, The Pageant, St. Louis, MO
Set One: Ocean Billy > Conduit, Nothing Too Fancy > Hangover, November Walk, Women Wine
and Song > Ocean Billy, 1348 > The Way You Rule the World > 1348

Set Two: The Triple Wide > Bitter Sweet Haji, Bridgeless > Walletsworth, “Top Ten” list,
Prowler > Bridgeless, Sociable Jimmy > Nothing Too Fancy, 1901 Jump**, Bright Lights Big
City

Encore: JaJunk > Don’t Stop the Spirit of the Radio > JaJunk

From Umphreys.com: Notes


String Cheese Incident 10/30/2010 Hampton Coliseum – Hampton, VA
Set 1: Come As You Are, Restless Wind, Rain, Pack It Up, Turn This Around > Breathe > Turn
This Around, Rivertrance, Las Vegas

Set 2: It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine), Fly Like an Eagle >
Born On The Wrong Planet, Motheship Connection, Space Cowboy1, Groove Is In The Heart2,
21st Century Schizoid Man, Major Tom (Coming Home), Planet Claire > Major Tom (Coming
Home) > It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)

Set 3: Piece of Mine, Bumpin’ Reel, Shine, Drifting > MLT > Drums > Desert Dawn

Encore: Search, Howard

Guests: Liza Oxnard & Keller Williams
From Friends of Cheese: Notes | Download


Gov’t Mule 10/30/10 Fox Theatre, Oakland, CA

Set I: The Who’s “Who’s Next” Album: Baba O’Riley, Bargain, Love Ain’t For Keeping, My
Wife, The Song Is Over, Getting in Tune, Going Mobile, Behind Blue Eyes, Won’t Get Fooled
Again

Set 2: Steppin’ Lightly, Broke Down On The Brazos, No Need To Suffer, Painted Silver Light
Trane > Eternity’s Breath > St. Stephen Jam > When Doves Cry > Beautifully Broken > When
Doves Cry > Beautifully Broken > Trane > with 3rd Stone From The Sun Tease, Noisy Jam >
Drums > Any Open Window, Railroad Boy > Thorazine Shuffle

Encore: Going Out West



If you know of any setlists we’re missing, please add them to the story comments and we’ll
update the list. If you
were at any of the shows, feel free to chime in with your thoughts.

More setlists at Setlist.com

JamBase | Spookytown


Furthur Festival | 05.28-05.30 | California

By: Garrin Benfield

Furthur Festival :: 05.28.10-05.30.10 :: Calaveras County Fairgrounds ::
Angel’s Camp, CA

Phil & Bobby by Susan J. Weiand

Arriving at the site of the Furthur Festival, I wondered why it had been so long
since the previous Mt. Aire gathering. The setting is classic Northern California –
rolling golden hills punctuated by groves of oak trees, miles of free form campgrounds,
and a lovely grass concert bowl. Clearly the one narrow, congested road into the grounds
could be a major temporary inconvenience to local residents, but it seems the revenue
generated by this mostly supremely mellow, polite crowd would easily offset any
frustrations. Once inside, things mostly ran like clockwork, and the 10,000 or so
gathered were treated to an intimate, bucolic weekend of rock ‘n’ roll.

Perhaps as a nod to those who thought the notion of Furthur
announcing it would perform six Grateful Dead records a bit, shall we
say, antithetical to the Dead ethos, the first night’s “sound check” featured a circuitous
setlist heavy on classics but not tied to any particular era. An inspired “Eleven” opener
gave way to one hell of a set that was dialed in from the get-go. I was struck right away
by the detail of the mix that allowed every instrumental voice to be heard with clarity
and volume. As a full moon rose over the early arriving crowd, the band patiently made
it’s way through a full one-set show, clearly surprising many who were not sure what to
expect from this first evening. Personal highlights for me included John Kadelecik
quoting Trey’s “First Tube” during a heavy “Let It Grow” and Bobby delivering a
stately “Standing On The Moon,” proving the old adage that “if at first one does not
succeed…” Satiated, we all slowly made our way back to the campgrounds, which were
still springing to life in the chilly darkness.

Dan Bern

On Saturday, I wandered over to the Acoustic Stage and caught a beautiful set by Mark Karan and
Friends
. While I was there they played an assortment of leftfield covers by
Townes Van Zandt, Randy Newman and the Dead. I had never seen Karan in this context and
he really shone, singing and playing with sensitivity and conviction – a lovely way to
ease into the day. On the Sunshine Stage, Dan Bern delivered
newer songs with his usual incisive, sardonic wit, backed by his new project, Common Rotation.
I’m happy to see Dan on the road again, and especially pleased to have his uncompromising
insights floating about the sometimes pollyana-ish jam scene. Next, James Nash, Joe
Kyle Jr.
and the rest of a temporary Waybacks lineup
brought their absolute A-game to the sweltering afternoon, pleasing those perhaps
unfamiliar with their own material with masterful versions of “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” and
“Shady Grove.” These guys are virtuosos with real heart and soul.


What was exciting me most about Furthur’s first “classic albums” sets was the tunes I’d
never seen performed live, or in some cases had never seen the light of day at all.
Oddly, the first half of the American Beauty set, comprised of songs these guys
have played hundred of times, was stiff and a bit rusty. This trend continued into the
first rarely performed song, Pigpen’s “Operator,” this time sung tentatively by
Phil. Happily things warmed up significantly with JK’s reading of “Candyman” (who
can resist “Hand me my old guitar…”) and the rest of the set was a pure joy of
monumental pieces from the dead canon, aided by Larry Campbell‘s
fiddle and guitar, and his wife Teresa Williams‘ vocals. I think for many who grew
up going to or listening to live Dead shows it will always be disorienting to hear
“Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace” in the middle of a set, but “Truckin’” brought it all home
with classic slow burn!

The Workingman’s Dead set busted out of the gates with “Uncle John’s Band” and
never let up. The band had clearly relaxed, and spent the next hour reveling in more
classic tunes that this time benefited from years of having been in the performance
repertoire. Larry Campbell’s biting Strat work lent a shimmer to “Cumberland” and
everything that followed, without impeding Furthur’s own identity and chemistry from
clearly emerging. The Anthem of the Sun set, the most anticipated by many as it
represents perhaps the pinnacle of “primal” Grateful Dead, was a monster from top to
bottom, climaxing with crushing versions of “Alligator” and “Caution.” I hope the
bruising guitar exclamations in “Caution” translate to tape, because, wow, they needed no
explanation under the rising moon!

The Mother Hips

I soldiered on and caught sets by three great bands on Sunday prior to Furthur. The
biggest surprise discovery of the weekend was the towering psychedelic progressive rock of
Carney.
Led by a fantastic and charismatic vocalist/guitarist and the most passionate, fiery band
I witnessed all weekend, Carney’s music seemed to fall in the Jeff Buckley meets Radiohead
universe, a welcome change of pace from the mostly Americana proceedings on the side
stages. The always-great Mother Hips were joined on the main stage by Jackie Greene,
who proved himself more than able on organ. The Hips designed their set for a gentle
afternoon and stuck mostly to their sunny Pacific stylings, save for the odd time changes
and riffage of their mid-nineties classic, “Magazine.” I wouldn’t have missed Electric Hot Tuna,
who were next up on the main stage, for the world. Stalwarts of blues, garage rock,
massive riffs and some of the original diplomats of the Haight-Ashbury, Jorma and
Jack have been playing together for 52 years. I was moved not just by their gnarly
set, but also by their longevity and by the Dead organization’s insistence on their
presence at this Festival. Loyalty does exist in the music business!

Hot Tuna

Initially I thought we were being thrown for a loop when Furthur came out and did not bust
into the expected “Help on the Way” to begin their Blues For Allah set. Instead,
the band leapt into one of those “same tempo as the next song but in a different key” jams
before beginning perhaps the Dead’s most progressive and esoteric collection. “Help >
Slip > Franklin” was pretty happening but not earth shattering. Far more moving was the
intense detail and thunder of “King Solomon’s Marbles,” which I’d vote for most welcome
comeback of the songs Furthur has reintroduced over the last year. “Music Never Stopped”
featured some searing runs by JK, and he delivered “Crazy Fingers” beautifully. Weir’s
dense but lovely “Sage and Spirit” was saved by Jeff Chimenti, who appeared to be
the only person who knew it that well. The “Blues for Allah” suite was a thrill to hear
live, but if you want to hear the only (?) other live version, you might be better off
checking out One From The Vault, as this well-intentioned attempt was gauzy and
confused around the transitional moments. Still, who’s complaining? Standing there
watching these guys try this stuff out and letting these songs wash over me was a thrill.
Joe Russo really distinguished himself deep in this second night with momentum and
focus, as Phil and Bobby seemed to show some wear and tear. There’s more than one reason
to hire a young, talented drummer, right?

Jackie Greene

After a wonderfully trippy set break that allowed some of the evening mist to begin
seeping into the amphitheater, the band returned and brought us back further in time with
a complete performance of Aoxomoxoa, the record that includes perhaps some of the
least performed Dead material of all. After a typically awesome “St. Stephen” (though I
would argue this might be the most over-performed song of the post-Jerry years), JK segued
right into a “Dupree’s” that also featured Larry Campbell on fiddle. For me, the two most
significant tunes that followed were Phil’s reading of Jerry’s “Rosemary” and the 11-
minute, genuinely psychedelic “What’s Become of the Baby?” which asked the pressing
question clearly on everyone’s mind: “Where is the child that played with the sun chimes
and chased the cloud sheep to the regions of rhyme?” Teresa Williams’ vocal wails and
white gown perfectly embodied the acid-queen-diva-goddess on this excursion. “Cosmic
Charlie” brought us home, and almost sadly, to the precipice of the last set of the
weekend.

Mark Karan

Despite mild exhaustion setting in, the Terrapin Station set rocked. To segue from
the set break music, Radiohead’s In Rainbows to a 14-minute “Estimated Prophet” was
perfect. (As a side note, all weekend the house music was very inspired, from Beck at
sunset to James Brown and Billy Preston! Yeah!) “Dancin’ in the Streets” was given its
full disco treatment (minus the convoluted outro jam of the celebrated ’77 versions),
“Passenger” was spot on, and Bobby really rallied for “Samson.” The last awesome surprise
was Teresa Williams returning for a song most people in attendance had surely never seen
performed, the Jerry-penned Donna Gauchaux showcase “Sunrise.” I felt a real affection in
the crowd for this one, a deep track that those of us who spent a few years scouring Dead
records before entering the tape trading community remember fondly. Teresa received a
real ovation before we glided into the B-side of this record, the entire 26-minute
“Terrapin Station” suite. What a way to bring it home!

Sir Joe Russo by Susan J. Weiand

After Phil thanked the crowd for being at our “family picnic,” he generously mentioned all
the people who worked so hard to make the festival happen, which received the largest
cheer of the weekend, hands down. Deadheads can be a wonderfully gracious bunch. The
appreciation was heartfelt, though. The whole weekend had that inescapable quality of
people fully absorbing the music, the scene, the memories, the personal connections, and
the uniqueness of a phenomenon that is not going to last forever. As I listened to the
weave of “Lady with a Fan”, convinced the band had intended this to be a sonic response to
the ecological tragedy unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico, I closed my eyes and said my own
thank you. Thanks, San Francisco! Thanks, Grateful Dead! Now what are we gonna do with
this energy?

JamBase | Awakened
Go See Live Music!


Weekend Setlist Roundup

Memorial Day serves as a day to honor all U.S. men and women killed or missing in action
in war. It is their sacrifice that allows us to speak, live and freak freely. It also
signifies the un-official start of Summer, and with it comes a flurry of live music
activity. Here is a smattering of setlists curated from shows and festivals around the
country that you might enjoy.


Furthur

Furthur, Angels Camp, CA

5/27: Soundcheck Jam
Space > Eleven > Eyes of the World > Dark Star > Bird Song > Loose Lucy, Dear Mr. Fantasy,
Scarlet Begonias > Fire on the Mountain, Let It Grow, Unbroken Chain, Standing on the
Moon, Playing in the Band > Dark Star
E: Donor Rap, Going Down the Road Feeling Bad

5/28 Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: American Beauty: Box of Rain, Friend of the Devil, Sugar Magnolia, Operator,
Candyman, Ripple > Brokedown Palace, Til the Morning Comes, Attics of my Life, Truckin
II: Workingman’s Dead: Uncle John’s Band, High Time, Dire Wolf, New Speedway
Boogie, Cumberland Blues, Black Peter, Casey Jones
III: Anthem of the Sun: Cryptical Envelopment > The Other One > New Potato Caboose
> Born Cross Eyed, Alligator, Caution
E: Donor Rap, New Song, One More Saturday Night

5/28 All Star Late Night Jam
*Viola Lee Blues (V1), *New Speedway Boogie, *#Fennario (Peggy-O), *#Tennessee Jed,
*%Viola Lee Blues (V2), *$Sugaree $$, *%@Death Don’t Have No Mercy, *%@I Know You Rider,
*%@Viola Lee Blues (V3)
* Phil (bass), Larry Campbell (guitar), Jackie Greene (guitar), Jeff Chimenti (keys), Joe
Russo (drums)
# with Teresa Williams (vocals), Larry Campbell on fiddle
% with Bob Weir (guitar), Jackie Greene (bass)
$ with Mark Karan (guitar)
@ with Jorma Kaukonen (guitar), Jack Casady (bass), Jackie Greene (keys), Bob Weir, Joe
Russo

5/29, Furthur Fest, Angels Camp, CA
I: Blues For Allah: Help on the Way > Slipnot! > Franklin’s Tower, King’s Soloman’s
Marbles, Music Never Stopped, Crazy Fingers, Sage & Spirit, Blues for Allah, Sandcastles
and Glass Camels, Usual Occurrences in the Desert

II: Aoxomoxoa: St. Stephen, Dupree’s Diamond Blues, Rosemary, Doin’ That Rag,
Mountains of the Moon, China Cat Sunflower, What’s Become of the Baby, Cosmic Charlie

III: Terrapin Station: Estimated Prophet, Dancing in the Street, Passenger, Samson
and Delilah, Sunrise, Lady With a Fan > Terrapin Station > Terrapin > Terrapin Transit >
At a Siding > Terrapin Flyer > Refrain, Donor Rap

E: Not Fade Away

Setlist Sources: PhilZone.com & #furthur



The Disco Biscuits

The Disco Biscuits

5/27/10 Boulder Theater, Boulder, CO
I: Flash Mob, Rivers, Story Of The World1> Aceetobee> Boom Shanker> Aceetobee
II: Save The Robots, The Very Moon> Digital Buddha> Lunar Pursuit> Digital Buddha
Encore: Spy

1 unfinished

5/28/10 Ogden Theater, Denver, CO
I: Voices Insane> Run Like Hell1> Voices Insane, The Bridge2, Jigsaw Earth
II: Spectacle, Air Song, Basis For A Day1> Rock Candy> Tricycle> Rock Candy
E: Once The Fiddler Paid

1 Unfinished, 2 1st time played

5/29/10 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO
Bisco Inferno
Other acts include The Crystal Method, Booka Shade, Aeroplane, The Pnuma Trio and The
Glitch Mob
I: Hot Air Balloon> Gangster> Portal To An Empty Head1, Mindless Dribble> The Great Abyss>
Hot Air Balloon
II: House Dog Party Favor, On Time, M.E.M.P.H.I.S.1> Minions> Basis For A Day2, Magellan
Encore: Home Again

1 with Chris Michetti (RAQ) on guitar, 2 completes 5/28 version

Source: Phantasy Bisco

Bisco
Inferno Photo Gallery



moe.

moe.

5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Rebubula, She Sends Me, All Roads Lead to Home, Day Dreaming*, Zed Nought Z, Rise>
Happy Hour Hero**, Mexico
II: Late Night in the Barn: George, Cissy Strut, Big World > Ricky Marten > Recreational
Chemistry, Brent Black > Interstellar Overdrive > Brent Black
E: Johnny Lineup
* New song, first time played (Rob)
** w/ Ivan Neville on keys

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Akimbo > Sensory Deprivation Bank, Haze# > Wormwood > St Augustine, McBain > Skrunk,
Waiting For The Punchline*
II: Dr. Graffenberg > Buster, 32 Things**, Billy Goat## >(nh) Moth > Low Spark Of High
Heeled Boys JAM > Farmer Ben
Encore: Lazarus
# FTP – new al. song
* w/ Danny Barnes
** w/ Brendan Bayliss
## FTP – new rob. song

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Bearsong >(nh) Timmy Tucker, One Life#, Deep This Time, Not Coming Down, Wind It Up,
San Berdino* > {moe. / ZPZ bandswitch} > Muffin Man
II: Crab Eyes > Threw It All Away > Crab Eyes, Okayalright, Blue Jeans Pizza**, Puebla##
>(nh) The Road > The Pit > The Road
Encore: Down Boy > Seat Of My Pants
{# FTP – new chuck. song
* w/ Dweezil Zappa
** w/ Kyle Hollingsworth
## FTP – new al. song}

Setlist Source: Phantasy moe. & Hidden
Track



Umphrey’s McGee

Umphrey’s McGee

5/28/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL

I: Rocker Part 2, Walletsworth, Turn & Dub > The Linear > Hajimemashite > Plunger, Gulf
Stream, Lisztomania

II: 40s Theme, Ocean Billy > #5, In The Kitchen > Girlfriend Is Better > Booth Love >
Glory, Ocean Billy

E: Cemetery Walk II

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Phil’s Far, Syncopated Strangers, Tribute to the Spinal Shaft, Conduit, All In Time,
Cemetery Walk*, Sledgehammer*

II: Intro, The Triple Wide, Mantis > Hangover > Mantis, Women Wine And Song*, Don’t Stop
’til You Get Enough*, Nothing Too Fancy
E: Mulche’s Odyssey
* w/ horns

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Afternoon Set: JaJunk, Much Obliged -> Partyin’ Peeps, The Fussy Dutchman, We’re Going to
War*, Seven Bridges Road**, Bridgeless > August > Bridgeless

*w/ Mike Rackey on steel pedal guitar
**first time played in full; last played 10.9.04

Late Night Set: Pay the Snucka > Bright Lights, Resolution*, Wappy Sprayberry** > Slacker
-> I’m On Fire# > Slacker^, Voices Inside My Head -> 1348, The Floor, ^^Pay the Snucka

*w/ Roy Ponce (Brainchild) on guitar
**w/ 25 or 6 to 4 jam
#no lyrics
^w/ Jesse (The Macpodz) on keys
^^w/ Rain Song intro


Umphrey’s McGee
5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Chillicothe, IL

Click below to preview tracks from this show

DOWNLOAD THIS
SHOW

Source: UMLive.net, Hidden
Track
& @umphreysmcgee



Gov’t Mule

Gov’t Mule

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Out Front Jam* > Thorazine Shuffle, Railroad Boy > Trane** > Eternity’s Breath > St.
Stephen Jam > The Shape I’m In > Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys^ Steppin’ Lightly, Broke
Down On The Brazos, Loser^^ Wild Horses$, Mule > Whole Lotta Love > Mule

Notes: * With Unring The Bell Tease. ** With 3rd Stone From The Sun and Norwegian Wood
Teases. ^With Chuck Garvey. ^^With Al Schnier. $ With Danny Barnes & Jeff Austin



5.29.2010 Hookahville, Legend Valley, Thornville, OH
I: Hammer & Nails, She Said, She Said > Tomorrow Never Knows with Day Tripper Tease, Banks
Of The Deep End, Rocking Horse, Devil Likes It Slow, Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody’s Home
with Steve Sweney, Patchwork Quilt > I’m A Ram with Shakedown Street Tease

II: Broke Down On The Brazos, Blind Man In The Dark, Kind Of Bird with The Wind Cries Mary
Tease, Fallen Down > The Other One Jam > with Gimmie Shelter Tease, Drums > Any Open
Window, Inside Outside Woman Blues > Going Out West > Bang A Gong > Going Out West

E: Into The Mystic > Soulshine with Gospel Intro

Setlist Source: Mule.net, Hidden
Track
& Jambands.com Box Scores



STS9

STS9

5/29/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
I: Really Wut?, Kamuy, Tooth, Beyond Right Now, Instantly, Equinox, Inspire Strikes Back,
Aimlessly, Lo Swaga

5/30/10 Summer Camp 2010, Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL
Late Night Set: This Us, EHM, Rent, Move My Peeps, What is Love?, One a Day, Hi-Key, 118,
Somesing, Hidden Hand Hidden Fist, Moonsocket, Unquestionable Supremacy of Nature

E: Twilight-> Monkey Music

Setlist Source: Hidden Track & The Lowdown



Railroad Earth

Railroad Earth

5/27/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: 420, Walk Beside Me, Dance Around Molly – > Dandelion Wine, Elko, Happy Song, The
Hunting Song, Black Bear, Cuckoo’s Medley *, Where Songs Begin, Head, Railroad Earth
E: RV

Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010.

5/28/10 DelFest @ Allegany County Fairgrounds – Cumberland, MD
I: Saddle of the Sun, Bread and Water, Old Dangerfield *, For Love, Colorado, Mighty River
- > Like a Buddha, Any Road, Seven Story Mountain, Long Way To Go *, Warhead Boogie – >
Hard Livin’
E: Little Rabbit

Comment: * with Ronnie McCoury on mandolin. DelFest 2010. Late Night Stage.

5/30/10 Summer Camp @ Three Sisters Park – Chillicothe, IL
I: Mighty River, Happy Song, Been Down This Road, The Forecast – > 1759, ‘Neath the Stars,
Bird in a House, New Jam (SHJ), Bringin’ My Baby Back Home

Setlist Source: Setlist.com


If you know of another noteworthy performance from the past few days, please add the
setlist to the comments below.

JamBase | Memorial Day


Furthur & Friends | 03.12 | San Francisco

Words by: Garrin Benfield | Images by: Dave Vann

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12.10 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Lesh & Robinson – Furthur :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

It’s safe to say I wouldn’t have been anywhere on March 12 other than with the guys ushering in the last Golden Age of the Grateful Dead. Furthur, the latest (and possibly greatest) reincarnation of The Boys, gathered for a tour-closing three set show at Bill Graham Civic to celebrate Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday and to raise money for Haitian Earthquake relief. And though this was a benefit for the Unbroken Chain Foundation, the preeminent concern was throwing a party with and for one of the most important musicians in rock ‘n’ roll, and certainly one of the Bay Area’s most celebrated exports.


Ironically, Lesh has become more of a household name in the outside world since Jerry Garcia died, as various groups under the name “Phil Lesh and Friends” have relentlessly toured the country and become a staple at summer festivals. But Lesh’s contribution to popular (and weird!) music was felt early. Soon after he taught himself to play electric bass in The Warlocks, he quickly established a singular, linear approach to what was traditionally an instrument strictly reserved for a support role.

It would not be an exaggeration to include Lesh in a list that includes towering figures of the low-end like Charles Mingus, James Jamerson, and Jaco Pastorius, in terms of the indelible imprint he has left on the possibilities of his instrument. Phil’s approach and tone are unmistakable once you are familiar with them: a chunky, flat-picked attack that relentlessly propels, cloaked in an EQ wave that somehow allows for both the richest low end “bombs” conjurable and the treble necessary to cut through dense aggregations like the one we witnessed on this night.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

Like the other members of the Grateful Dead, Phil has a deserved reputation as possibly one of the coolest geeks in rock, a reputation aided by his interest in modern 20th century symphonic and experimental music, and involvement with such out-there projects as Seastones with composer Ned Lagin. But Phil always had deep groove and soul, and though some stories suggest the contrary, he was a great ally and supporter of Pigpen and has always gone out of his way to keep the R&B roots of the Dead alive. On this night alone, Phil chose to play three songs associated with Pig: the rare “Two Souls in Communion,” “Easy Wind” and “Hard to Handle,” a clear nod to the formative days of this band that began stretching out their limited repertoire at long, four-set shows in the mid-sixties and accidentally birthed a new genre of music.

As the Grateful Dead stretched its wings in the hugely inspired period that spilled over into the early-70s, however, it became clear that Jerry was Phil’s true musical brother. Together, on a nightly basis, they wove the single note improvisations that seared the band’s identity into our cultural consciousness. At my second Dead show in the mid-80s, I recall hearing a passing Head say, “When Phil’s on, the band’s on,” a phrase that intrigued me but I did not fully compute then. The rumbling, sometimes sub-sonic importance of Phil’s playing might be the last musical element to filter into a new listener’s head – especially at a questionably mixed stadium show – but once it’s in there, there is really no substitute (even Alfonso Johnson, who subbed for Phil in The Other Ones, comes to mind). Phil literally had to conceive and build the bass that could accomplish what he heard in his head, and for that he should also always be acknowledged as a progenitor of the modern, active pickup electric bass. And though never particularly celebrated for his singing (maybe an understatement), he still managed to compose one of the enduring classics of the country/folk rock period, the lilting, gorgeous “Box of Rain,” a song that elicits rich memories and emotions from people who were alive to hear it drifting from dorm room windows in 1970 and those who first encountered it on hissy third-generation bootleg cassettes.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

How fitting then that Phil chose to open his birthday show with a gentle acoustic set that included three of the towering pieces of the Hunter/Garcia catalog that he has long publicly admired: “Ripple,” “Brokedown Palace” and the stunning “Attics of My Life.” Bobby sang/whispered “Ripple” with genuine, time-worn sensitivity, Jackie Greene paid perfect respect to “Brokedown,” and all the vocalists, including Chris Robinson (The Black Crowes), “the girls” (Zoe Ellis and Sunshine Garcia Becker) and John Kadlecik seemed to breathe with “Attics” until the room had truly unified. Phil’s beautiful take on “Mountains of the Moon” was also a highlight – it seems years of attempts at getting this song right have finally paid off, with Phil not forcing the vocal but rather very calmly allowing it to happen. With the new arrangement of “Mountains,” Phil has accomplished quite a feat, as the slow psychedelic dirge feels ancient in its roots and quite contemporary in its delivery. The forethought that went into this acoustic set clearly portended very good things for the night and also immediately thrust us into a contemplative state usually reserved for late in a second set. It was almost as if we were experiencing the normal emotional arc of a show in reverse. Disorienting and wonderful.

The electric segment of the evening began with a stand-alone “Scarlet Begonias,” sung by Jackie and driven by drummer Joe Russo in his first appearance of the evening. During the jam, Kadlecik revealed that over the past few months with Furthur he has been allowed, possibly for the first time in his professional career, to truly search for his own voice on lead guitar. The results were refreshingly un-Garcia like, including some microtonal bends that I associate more with Indian classical music than psychedelic rock. Weir followed with a surprise “New Minglewood Blues,” from which he has extracted the normal blues turnaround that we are so used to hearing. It’s so unexpected that the band still seems to struggle with it a bit. It was akin to the strange effect of Weir adding extra bars between verses of a song that you are used to hearing straight. This muscular version proved itself worthy of this important second set slot, though, and the rest of this long set got raunchy, bluesy and occasionally sloppy, and included so many twists and turns as to be pretty disorienting at times. “Viola Lee Blues,” the signature Furthur jam vehicle so far, was broken up into three separate appearances. Chris Robinson screamed mightily during “Hard to Handle,” and the set came to a joyous, if severely mid-tempo conclusion with “Like A Rolling Stone” and “Sugaree.” I tend to like my Dead humble and fragile, but if you lean towards the dark, heavy blues that emerges with this many people onstage, this set was for you.

Furthur & Friends :: 03.12 :: San Francisco

At just after midnight, the band casually reassembled onstage and broke into a very groovy “Not Fade Away” jam, led by Phil and the drummers (John Molo was now onstage) and decorated by the guitarists. As three floats festooned with Mardi Gras-like decorations slowly made their way across the floor, the band jammed on, but did not sing “Not Fade Away.” Instead, where the vocals would have begun, everyone broke into “Happy Birthday” for Phil and hundreds of balloons dropped onto the floor. The band resumed the Bo Diddley jam for another four minutes or so then just sort of stopped. I’m really not sure what happened at this point, but Bobby said, “Well, we’re going to take another short break, but this one’s going to be truly short.” The packed hall was vocal in its confusion, as some momentum had definitely been established, but then just laughed it off and chalked it up to one more strange Dead moment.


“Playin’ In The Band” was a good way to launch into new territory, establish a whole new direction, and erase any confusion from the last segment. The jam out of “Playin’” was dense, with three lead guitarists in Weir, Greene and Kadlecik trying to accommodate one another, and doing so quite well. Weir, in particular, demonstrated such a welcome hospitality all night to his fellow players, not indulging in any of the confusing hand signals or last minute cues we’ve come to expect from him at some of these high profile shows. “St. Stephen” began a show ending sequence of classic tunes that culminated in an inspired, unexpected choice for the ballad slot, “Comes a Time,” sung with real heart by Chris Robinson. It felt a bit off-kilter to have Kadlecik play a tearful, flanged-out solo, but then not resume the lead vocal. It occurred to me at this point in the show how little he had sung at all, in fact. (“Lazy River Road,” which he handled with grace, seemed like eons ago, being the second song of the night.) The last true surprise of the show came next, a breakneck “Cream Puff War,” played with all its mid-60s impatience and bluster intact, and accompanied by two female go-go dancers on either side of the stage. I actually heard some grousing from some Heads about this clearly ironic, showbiz move. I thought it was perfectly good-natured, especially since the song lasted all of two minutes. That’s gotta be a record for brevity for these guys!

“Franklin’s Tower” literally jumped out of “Cream Puff War” and signaled the end of an inspired night. And though the band frequently tests audience stamina these days, the huge, show ending ovations these guys have been getting attest to the feeling that few are anxious to see them go anywhere. It’s as if we are taking this opportunity to really express how lucky we feel to have been a part of this music, and how surreal it is that it’s still rumbling forward, and right here in the center of San Francisco no less, the place of its inception. Phil seemed genuinely humbled before the encore, saying, “Thank you for making this, I would have to say, THE most special birthday of my life.” The response? Another thunderous round of applause. Thank you, Phil!

Phil’s 70th Birthday :: 03.12.10 :: Bill Graham Civic Auditorium :: San Francisco, CA

Set I Acoustic without Russo and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & Chris Robinson:

Ripple, Lazy River Road, Fennario, Two Souls in Communion, Brokedown Palace, A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, They Love Each Other, Mountains of the Moon, Attics of My Life

Set II without Lane and with Jackie Greene & Chris Robinson:

Scarlet Begonias, Minglewood Blues, Easy Wind > New Speedway Boogie, Viola Lee Blues > High Time > Caution Jam > Viola Lee Blues > Hard To Handle, Viola Lee Blues > Like A Rolling Stone > Sugaree

Set III without Lane and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & John Molo:

Not Fade Away Jam* Float Parade, Happy Birthday Phil!*, Balloon Drop, Not Fade Away Jam >
Playing in the Band > Jam > St. Stephen > The Other One > Elevator > Unbroken Chain, Comes a Time > Cream Puff War* with dancers > Franklin’s Tower

Encore: Johnny B. Goode

Setlist courtesy of phillesh.net

Continue reading for more pics…

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

JamBase | California

Go See Live Music!


Furthur Celebrate Phil’s 70th w/ Robinson, Greene, Molitz, Molo

Furthur Celebrate Phil’s 70th Birthday with

Chris Robinson, Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz, John Molo

Phil Lesh

On Friday night, March 12, Phil Lesh celebrated his 70th Birthday at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, CA. The evening featured Lesh’s current band, Furthur, as the house act for the night with a number of special guests from Lesh’s previous bands sitting in. Guests included The Black CrowesChris Robinson, Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz and John Molo. The concert was an Unbroken Chain Foundation Benefit For Haitian Earthquake Relief.

Set I Acoustic without Russo and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & Chris Robinson:

Ripple, Lazy River Road, Fennario, Two Souls in Communion, Brokedown Palace, A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, They Love Each Other, Mountains of the Moon, Attics of My Life

Set II without Lane and with Jackie Greene & Chris Robinson:

Scarlet Begonias, Minglewood Blues, Easy Wind > New Speedway Boogie, Viola Lee Blues > High Time > Caution Jam > Viola Lee Blues > Hard To Handle, Viola Lee Blues > Like A Rolling Stone > Sugaree

Set III without Lane and with Jackie Greene, Steve Molitz & John Molo:

Not Fade Away Jam* Float Parade, Happy Birthday Phil!*, Balloon Drop, Not Fade Away Jam >
Playing in the Band > Jam > St. Stephen > The Other One > Elevator > Unbroken Chain, Comes a Time > Cream Puff War* with dancers > Franklin’s Tower

Encore: Johnny B. Goode

Setlist courtesy of phillesh.net

Check back soon for complete coverage of Phil Lesh’s 70th Birthday Celebration.

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


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!


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”