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December
25, 2000
Dear Friends,
As another year comes to a close, we'd like to thank
everyone that donated blood these past three weekends: at
the Blood Centers of the Pacific in Marin and San
Francisco, and at the American Red Cross Blood Center in
Oakland. It was a pleasure to meet all of you that turned
out. These blood drives will continue to run through
January 15, 2001. We urge all to visit their local
community blood centers to donate blood and to complete
organ donor cards during this critical season. We are
also planning a national blood and organ donor drive
shortly so please visit our website at www.phillesh.net
for updates. So much has happened during the past two
years since Phil's recovery; even so, we pause every day
to offer thanks for the gift of life given so generously
by another human being. We
are also pleased to announce that Mike Gordon will be
taking part in the Unbroken Chain Benefit on December 30,
as well as our New Years Eve show the following evening.
We can't tell you how excited we are to be presenting
this version of Phil Lesh & Friends for our hometown
family at Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium in Oakland. The New
Years Eve show will be full of surprises; however, we can
tell you that the evening will open with a rare acoustic
performance by our friends Gov't Mule and will be
followed by at least three full sets by Phil Lesh &
Friends. May the music never stop.
This
past year was marked by many musical adventures with a
variety of wonderful friends, and the coming year will
continue to offer new and exciting growth. We are also
continuing our presentation of complete soundboard
recordings for free download at www.phillesh.net. Please
share this music with your friends.
We wish everyone a happy and healthy holiday season.
Ars Longa, Vita Breve,
Phil Lesh & Friends
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Concert
Review
For Deadheads, 2001 is filled with promise
By: Jim Harrington, Correspondent
Oakland Tribune
Published January 2, 2001
There hasn't been a better year to be a Deadhead since
before the beloved
Jerry Garcia died in 1995. This year, the extended
Grateful Dead family gave
us a true cornucopia of musical offerings. Original
members Mickey Hart,
Bill Kreutzmann and Bob Weir formed the most potent
version yet of the Other
Ones and headlined the Furthur Festival.
Weir released a well-received new album with Ratdog and
took that band on the
road. Dead bassist Phil Lesh continued to establish his
Phil and Friends
project as a legitimate touring entity with two great
lineups.
Everywhere a Deadhead looked, the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame band's music was
being performed.
It wasn't the Dead, but finally, it was feeling like
truly the next best
thing.
The party climaxed in fine fashion at two different
venues- just a few miles
apart- in Oakland on New Year's Eve. The Other Ones
brought funk -monster
George Clinton and local fave Steve Kimock to the spacey
party at the New
Arena at Oakland. The Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium was
taken over by Lesh and
his very talented friends.
The choice of which show to attend was fairly simple: Do
you want the maximum
number of Dead members or the maximum amount of Dead
music? The Other Ones
offered four former members of the Dead crew (counting
Bruce Hornsby) but had
two opening acts. Phil had only Phil, but he was
promising three, maybe
four, sets of Dead material.
Spirit of Jerry
Looking to connect with the spirit of Jerry as we enter
the real new
millennium, this critic decided to go with the maximum
amount of jamming and
Dead tunes. Plus, as a music writer that is not afraid to
admit to owning
Terrapin Station, I have always felt the spirit of the
Dead more strongly at
the Phil shows that any of the post-Jerry gatherings.
Both concerts marked welcome returns to an important
tradition. For decades
the Dead's annual Dec 31 show in Oakland was the miracle
ticket of all
miracle tickets. Since 1992, the band's final NYE gig,
the Deadhead crew was
without a home base on the last day of the year.
At Lesh's party, the fans got their first glance at the
latest Phil and
Friends gathering. And they certainly weren't
disappointed. This is
certainly one of the strongest lineups of the band. The
group that toured
this summer with Bob Dylan as an opening act and who
played the Kaiser for
Phil's 60th birthday party was great. But this one might
have been the best.
The latest model included gritty guitarist-vocalist
Warren Haynes, guitarist
Jimmy Herring, sturdy drummer John Molo, keyboardist Rob
Barraco and Phish
bassist Mike Gordon. With the exception of Gordon, who
was really a special
guest, this is the lineup that Lesh has been performing
with since September.
It was the first time that this band has played the Bay
Area.
Lesh is continuing to improve as a band leader and looked
at ease as he
directed his mates through stretched out versions of Dead
classics such as
"Uncle John's Band," "Sugeree," and
"Bertha."
Evening's Highlight
The highlight of the evening was watching the interaction
between Lesh and
Gordon. This is not the first time that the two bass
greats have worked
together. Gordon performed a few songs with the older
master at Lesh's
birthday party at the Kaiser back in March. Lesh also sat
in with Phish at
the Shoreline back in 1999.
Haynes (Gov't Mule, Allman Brothers) simply blistered on
guitar. The bluesy
Southern man soared through galactic jams of Traffic's
"Low Spark of
High-Heeled Boys," and the Dead standard "Dark
Star."
Other highlights included a particularly trippy version
of "Mountains of the
Moon," starting the third set, and a funky
"Midnight Hour," which ended the
second set and "2000." The encore was basically
a forth set in itself and
included "Just a Little Light," and
"Stella Blue."
It was a fitting end to what had been a good year to be a
Deadhead. |
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