Article Contributed by Alan Sheckter
Published on July 31, 2016
Less than one year and about 50 shows into this thing, Dead & Company illustrated on July 29 at the newly renamed Toyota Amphitheatre near Sacramento, that it has found a powerful groove that satisfies those who have been immersed in the Grateful Dead culture for 50 years or 50 weeks. Reverence to the Grateful Dead catalog of songs, which arguably is one of the most important such collections of the second half of America’s 20th century, combined with the booster -shot infusions of fine-tuned and powerful new arrangements, delivering a satisfying live experience. Twenty-one years after Jerry Garcia’s passing, the slight weirdness of him not being there has almost disappeared, for me. And Lesh, he’s still uber-active in the Bay Area and New York area with his fine friends, so I didn’t pine for his presence so much (and Burbridge is a bass beast).
Not everyone smoked weed of course at Dead & Company’s visit to the Toyota Amphitheatre about 35 miles north of Sacramento, but everyone did bake under the current heat spell’s super dry, 105-degree sun that felt akin to a pizza oven. Attitudes were good all-around at the pre-show parking lot marketplace scene, as hearty attendees drank and gave away water, covered up with all means of silks and other light-fabric throws, and generally moved about slowly. Slow does not equate to unenthusiastic however, as smiles still beamed from most rosier-than-normal cheeks walking about. And besides, this being California, the temperate dropped by 30 degrees by show’s end – two approximately 90-minute sets and 35-minute break
From the 15-minute “Uncle John’s Band” through the acoustic “Ripple” encore, the band on this night fired on all circuits. Even to this admittedly fairly jaded Grateful Dead music curmudgeon, the Bob Weir-led ensemble, with John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge, and Jeff Chimenti all playing superb, essential roles, and a couple of pretty fine drummers named Bill and Mickey, was sublime. While Weir and the Mayer traded lead vocals, Burbridge and Chimenti added background vocals. In addition, Burbridge lent a hand during the second set’s drumming passage, turning it into a three-man creation. The post-drums sequence of “New Speedway Boogie,” “Morning Dew,” and “Casey Jones” was tremendous.
These players should be wholly commended for songs being taken to unprecedented heights, including jams on “Ramble On Rose,” “China Cat Sunflower,” and “He’s Gone.” Every song had a special new wrinkle and flourish than the versions of songs that many of us were weaned on. Even songs that in days of yore were known as mellow songs, such as “Loser” and “Lost Sailor,” each had jams in them that were as powerful as a 1980s-era “The Other One.” And that’s no small feat.
T
echnology does play a role in the awesomeness of the Dead & Company product. While the band is clearly well-rehearsed, the crisp clarity of the sound – even in this large amphitheater – combined with state-of-the-art lights and visuals, including brilliant stage-backdrop live video feeds and artful animations, added to the experience. The gestalt of it all was something to behold.
The crowd included those young and old, and one father and son (both named Jon, but with different middle names, I’m told), from Elk Grove, Calif., near Sacramento had different but equally positive points of view.
Jon the father, age 53, saw about 35 Grateful Dead shows in his day. He knew all of the material and was pleased with how Dead & Company has developed. “They are so much more in sync than they were eight months ago. They don’t even need to look at each other to communicate anymore. They just go!”
Jon the son, 22, whose experiences with The Grateful Dead scene included a Fare Thee Well show in 2015 and being held as a baby at one of the many Garcia memorial celebrations in 1995, was also enthused, based on, if nothing else, his ongoing cell phone capturing of the band and its ever changing visual backgrounds. “Most of my friends don’t appreciate this music, but if I have the time, I listen” the younger Jon said, adding that he liked hip-hop and “everything.”
Scattered thoughts and recollections of the Dead & Company show near Sacramento, circa July 29, 2016
At 57, I’ve been at this Grateful Dead music thing for about 40 years. So as a concert reviewer, you’re not gonna get a “they crushed it,” out of me very often. But this Dead & Company band, in this current space in time, on a super-hot night in California’s north valley, they indeed crushed it.