• https://www.dead.net/features/news/furthur-festival-music-magic-california-gathering
    Furthur Festival: The Music is Magic at California Gathering

    Well, that was really something!

    I’ve yet to encounter anyone who attended the Memorial Day weekend Furthur Festival who didn’t have an absolute blast! And why not: the music was first-rate, the weather breathtakingly beautiful, the setting perfect, even the price was right—$125 for a very full al fresco weekend of camping and music; $75 for a single day of more than 12 hours of music spread across three stages, plus the dozens of crafts booths and other cool stuff, from the Terrapin Pavilion gallery (it’s walls covered in wonderful photos and other GD memorabilia) to the ol’ Kesey bus whence the festival’s name derives, sitting in all its psychedelic glory right in the thick of it all; Zane Kesey cheerfully presiding. Food offerings were bounteous, (mostly) healthy and easily accessible. Bathroom lines weren’t too horrific. Security was present inside but basically hands-off. The large bowl where the big acts played never got hideously congested (see GD at Calaveras, 1987, for contrast), and the sound was clear and loud, even towards the back. From what I could see the one day I was there—Saturday—everyone was pretty much giving everyone else the space they needed/wanted, and the areas around the smaller stages always provided plenty of room for everyone. I didn’t see one negative vibe the whole time I was there. Indeed, this was pretty much a smile-fest all the way around. It was one of those occasions we only rarely encountered back in the old Grateful Dead days where the crowd, the place and the bands all seemed to be in perfect alignment and it really felt like our world, and all that implies. It was truly one of the mellowest and most relaxed (in a good way) concert scenes I’ve ever been a part of.

    (There were, however, scattered problems in the campgrounds and outside the immediate area, with numerous drug arrests and even some violent episodes evidently caused by knucklehead dealers and anarchists—why don’t they just go away? Hopefully, these episodes, sensationally reported in the local press, of course, will not prevent this overwhelmingly positive event from taking place next year.)

    It was too big to cover it all, but here are some scattershot pictures from the weekend. I’m confident y’all will also give us some of your own impressions of the music and the scene, too!

    This mirror-frog sat in a field near the main stage.
    Photo: Regan McMahon

    First of all, the setting: The Calaveras County Fairgrounds are a few miles outside of the old Gold Rush town of Angel’s Camp, in the rolling golden foothills of the Sierra (the snow-capped peaks of which were clearly visible most of the drive up from the Bay Area). The region was immortalized in an 1865 short story by Mark Twain called “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,” and two years later that became the title of a popular collection of Twain short stories. With that sort of literary pedigree, is it any wonder that so many tourist spots in the area have frog names or imagery? Indeed, the whole Fairgrounds seems dedicated to the croaking amphibians—a sign at one of the entrances calls it “Frogtown USA,” and there are frog statues scattered around the site. Just two weeks before the Furthur Fest, the grounds hosted the annual County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee, the highlight of which is a jumping contest for the biggest, gnarliest frogs this side of the Pecos. The Furthur Festival’s addition to frogmania was a venue dubbed the Frogtown Fillmore, which was the center of some hot late night action on Friday and Saturday nights.

    But we’re getting ahead of ourselves a bit. Friday night, what was rather casually billed as a “soundcheck” for Furthur was actually a full-blown show by the band on the main stage, boasting an incredible set list, and the hot playing to match it. (I wasn’t there but bought CDs of it at the show on Saturday). Check it out:

    Jam> The 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, Encore: Goin’ Down the Road Feeling Bad

    Wow, impressive from beginning to end, and also completely unpredictable compared to Furthur’s other six sets (three each Saturday and Sunday) which were based around specific albums. The “Dark Star” and “Bird Song” were interplanetary, as you’d hope, and “Scarlet > Fire” a real barn-burner.

    But wait, Friday night there was lots more late-night action at the aforementioned indoor Frogtown Fillmore, where in the wee hours, members of the weekend’s top bands got together in various configurations to rock the frickin’ house! First up was a lineup that hearkened back to most recent Phil & Friends band—Phil, Larry Campbell and Jackie Greene on guitars, but current Furthur-ites Joe Russo and Jeff Chimenti on drums and keys. They roared through “Viola Lee Blues” and “New Speedway Boogie” (which Jackie often plays with his own group), then Larry switched to fiddle and his angel-voiced wife Teresa Williams joined them for versions of “Peggy-O” and “Tennessee Jed.” Phil split and was replaced by Jackie on bass, the Campbells left, and Bob Weir came out for more “Viola Lee Blues,” followed by “Sugaree,” which also brought RatDog/Jemimah Puddleduck guitarist/singer Mark Karan to the stage for that one song. And last but not least, bassist Jack Casady and guitarist Jorma Kaukonen from Hot Tuna joined the fray (Bob still out there; Jackie switching to keyboards) and tackled “Death Don’t Have No Mercy,” “I Know You Rider” and finally, “Viola Lee Blues” one mo’ time. Not a bad start to the weekend, eh?

    Both Saturday and Sunday, most of the early afternoon action at the Fairgrounds was on the two smaller outdoor stages. The Sunshine Stage, which was just a few hundred feet to the side of the main bowl stage and facing rows of actual benches (rather than being at the foot of a grassy slope like the big stage) hosted such groups as The Waybacks (probably the best-known of the bunch), Honeymoon, Carney, Maiden Lane, Common Rotation (with Dan Bern) and Blue Light River (led by Phil’s son Brian).

    Just inside the main entrance, in a beautiful area of green grass surrounded by various sprawling shade trees, sat the tiny Dark Hollow acoustic music stage, presided over by Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams. I spent nearly all of Saturday afternoon there, as a parade of fine acts took to the stage. After a few numbers from Larry and Teresa (who also turned up to play at some point with everyone who graced “their” stage), Jemimah Puddleduck came on and played a fabulous set (Mark Karan and Bob Grosse on acoustic guitar and bass respectively, keyboardist John “J.T.” Thomas on accordion for the occasion, and two dynamic percussionists—Wally Ingram and Joe Chirco) that included such cool tunes “It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry,” a swingin’ take on “Don’t Let Go,” Randy Newman’s beautiful “Think It’s Gonna Rain,” Gram Parsons’ “She,” the Dead’s “Easy Wind,” and a couple of MK originals. There was lots of jamming even in this acoustic format—it was definitely some of the best music I heard at the Furthur Fest. Guitarist/singer Brian Lesh’s Americana band Blue Light River (featuring the appealing singer Lindsay Brauner) also acquitted themselves nicely (in front of proud papa Phil, who sat casually with wife Jill and friends on the lawn in the meadow) with a set that combined some original songs with covers including “Queen Jane Approximately” and, most intriguing of all, the Garcia-Paul Kantner number “The Mountain Song” from the 1971 Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra sessions… dare to be obscure! (Actually, only the chorus was from that song. The verses were written by Brian, and he calls it “Mountain Town.”)

    Left: The Dark Hollow acoustic stage was jumpin' six hours a day.
    Right: On the acoustic stage are (L-R) John "J.T." Thomas, Larry Campbell, Teresa Williams and Mark Karan during Jemimah Puddleduck's set. Photos: BJ

    Our time at the Dark Hollow stage ended with a sparkling ten-song set by the trio of Jackie Greene, Larry (on fiddle, guitar, mando and vocals) and Teresa that opened with “Bertha,” also featured a moving “Brokedown Palace,” “Sing Me Back Home,” “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” and several others before concluding with a transcendently gorgeous “Drifting Too Far from the Shore.”

    During the mid-afternoon, too, both days, the Terrapin Pavilion was packed wall to wall with hundreds of Dead Heads for a couple of loosely structured Q&A sessions moderated by Furthur media relations chief J.C. Juanis and featuring lively stories from folks like Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, photographer Herbie Greene, former GD manager Rock Scully and basketball great/World’s Tallest Dead Head Bill Walton.

    Then it was over to the main stage and excellent electric sets by Jemimah Puddleduck (loved “Walk Through the Fire”) and Jackie Greene (great blues workout on “The Thrill Is Gone”; a thoroughly raucous “I’m Waiting for the Man” with guest Mark Karan; hot “Like a Ball and Chain” closer) before Furthur took the stage around 8:25, when Phil stepped to the mike and dedicated the show to Larry Campbell’s mother, Maggie, who died a couple weeks earlier. “Maggie Campbell was a great friend to all music and musicians,” Phil noted, “and one of the most vital and alive people I’ve ever known… God bless you, Maggie! Dance with us!”

    Let’s see, which of the six pre-announced albums will it be?… Drum roll…All right, it’s the opening strains of “Box of Rain,” which means it’s American Beauty first! I was particularly delighted by that because even though I’d seen three of the five (unannounced) “album” nights that Phil & Friends (with Jackie and Larry) played at the Warfield in SF two years ago, I’d missed the Workingman’s Dead/American Beauty night. Of course the downside of this format is that if you know the albums well, there is no mystery about what song comes next, which has always been one of the most compelling parts of the Grateful Dead and post-Jerry bands experience. Still, it’s always fascinating to hear how it all hangs together (or not) based on the relative evolution of the tunes on each album—for instance, “Till the Morning Comes” has only been played a few times by Phil’s bands in recent years (and “Operator” even less so), while songs like “Sugar Magnolia” and “Truckin’” have, obviously, been part of the ongoing history of the GD and post-GD groups for most of the past 40 years. Larry Campbell came out and added fiddle to an excellent “Friend of the Devil,” mandolin to “Ripple” and electric guitar to a few others, and Teresa joined in on the spectacular “Attics of My Life.” I also loved John K’s heartfelt “Candyman.” “Box of Rain” featured a real jam on it for the first time in my experience, and though Phil’s “Operator” stumbled in places, it still felt “new.” “Sugar Mag,” curiously, didn’t have its “Sunshine Daydream” coda. Maybe they were going to “save it” for the end, after “Truckin’,” and forgot?

    The second set was, much to my surprise, Workingman’s Dead (I thought for sure they’d save that for Sunday) and it felt even more cohesive to me than American Beauty. John K. was especially strong on his version of “High Time,” and everybody cooked on an extended “New Speedway Boogie.” As you’d hope, “Uncle John’s Band” was a glorious unifying experience (nice jam, too!); “Cumberland Blues” provided non-stop hip-shakin’ excitement; and “Casey Jones” was completely out of control by the end, just like the engineer in the song.

    It was no surprise that the third “album” of the evening, Anthem of the Sun, would be the most unified and jammiest of the three—after all, that album consists of connected tunes and a ton of experimental playing. However, as well-played and exploratory as the 18-minute “Other One” in the heart of the opening “That’s It for the Other One” suite was, it was also a tad sedate and well-behaved for my tastes. Much stronger was the “New Potato Caboose,” which John nailed guitar-wise and which benefitted greatly from the vocal contributions of Sunshine Becker and recent addition Jeff Pehrson. (In fact, they were superb all weekend long; I like having that extra on-pitch male voice in the mix.) John sang lead on a solid “Alligator,” and Bob took on “Caution” and did a great job on it. Phil and Joe Russo were driving that train rhythmically, while John’s guitar danced furiously on top.

    The biggest shock of the night was when they came back for an encore and introduced a brand-new song with excellent Robert Hunter lyrics called “Muli Guli.” Musically it sort of reminds me of a hybrid of “U.S. Blues” and “Pride of Cucamonga”—a Grateful Dead shuffle all the way. Phil, Bob and John traded off on the lead vocals. The set then concluded with the de rigeur (but still appreciated) “Saturday Night.” Funky New Orleans jammeisters Galactic then kept the Frogtown Fillmore rockin’ in the late, late night slot.

    Here's the setting for the main stage,
    amid the rolling hills of Calaveras County.
    Photo: BJ

    Day Three broke warm and sunny and once again saw plenty of great music on the two small stages before the Mother Hips hit the main stage in the late afternoon. On the acoustic stage, Dan Bern’s group, Common Rotation, was well-received, and Blue Light River played another set, this time joined by Phil and the older of his two musical sons, Grahame—nice to have two generations so happy together onstage! Jackie Greene and Tim Bluhm of the Mother Hips did one of their upbeat and harmony-filled Skinny Singers sets (aided by Nikki Bluhm), and country-rock singer-songwriter J.C. Flyer played a couple of his original tunes in the midst of a set by stage hosts Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams (who again offered their services to anyone who needed an extra voice or stringed instrument part at the Dark Hollow stage). For many, the highlight was undoubtedly the appearance of Hot Tuna’s Jack and Jorma and mandolinist Barry Mitterhoff (joined a bit by Larry Campbell, natch) for a set of deep country blues and old-time folk numbers. After all, Tuna was the original psychedelic acoustic group in the SF scene!

    Electric Hot Tuna also smoked on the main stage during their hour-and-a-half slot. Besides Jack, Jorma and Barry, the current lineup consists of journeyman guitarist G.E. Smith (most recently with Moonalice), and drummer Skoota Warner. The red-hot band’s 11-song set included favorites such as “I See the Light,” “Rock Me Baby,” “Corners Without Exits,” “99 Year Blues” and “Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man.” Yowza!

    Furthur, Night Two: With three “albums” remaining, the biggest question was the order in which they would be played. Furthur prolonged the mystery by opening their first set with a four-and-half minute jam which finally ended up at… Baddup-Baaaaaa!...i.e. “Help on the Way”! Yeah! Blues for Allah! This should be interesting… And it was. The “Help-Slip-Frank” was powerful and (just about) perfectly executed (especially the “Slipknot!” jam.) Drummer Joe Russo—a skins-smackin’ savage all weekend—laid down a little solo before the group exploded into a ten-minute “King’s Solomon’s Marbles,” JK and Jeff C. soloing effectively during the churning middle section; the whole group negotiating every twist and turn with fluidity and ease. John’s “Crazy Fingers” was truly a thing of beauty, with a lilting final jam that went on and on, and Bob’s instrumental “Sage and Spirit” was a sonorous quartet with no drums—lovely!

    But still, looming off in the distance—the 800-pound camel in the room—was the “Blues for Allah” suite. How the hell were they gonna pull that off? Really well, that’s how! Man, you’d think it had been a regular part of their repertoire these past 35 years. The vocal passages were spot-on (all the weirdly designed harmonies in place), the instrumental flights in between actually more interesting than on the Grateful Dead album (fabulous drum fills by Joe R. during the opening minutes), and I love the way after the last verse they went into this strange, raunchy blues riff for a bit (hey, it is called “Blues for Allah”) before it settled into the lovely last vocal refrain: “Under e-ter-ni-ty…” Fantastic! Quite an achievement!

    The second set was Aoxomoxoa, another disc with intriguing possibilities and its own set of challenges. Now, back at the Warfield in 2008, Teresa Williams turned out to be the secret ingredient that allowed Phil & Friends (with Larry and Jackie) to navigate through the previously uncharted waters of “What’s Become of the Baby” and “Rosemary.” Well, there she was again, dueting with Phil on “Baby” when the time came; nice to have her around! But first, the “St. Stephen” kickoff was full of fire and great playing, and then right after the “what would be the answer to the answer man?” line, they lurched right into “Dupree’s,” the story passionately “told” by JK both vocally and with his guitar (aided by Larry C. on sprightly fiddle). Jeff also shone brightly on that one. Larry stayed on for “Rosemary,” etching the melody with a sweet violin line, accompanied by a simple guitar line from JK, before Phil (alone) entered with a nearly whispered first verse. Other instruments soon came in quietly, but the song stayed appropriately understated and dreamy throughout. “Doin’ That Rag” built a nice head of steam in the concluding jam (and they did sing the a capella part at the end), and then came another superbly trippy and varied “Mountains of the Moon” (with more fiddle!), followed closely by “China Cat”—always a crowd-pleaser; neat hearing Jeff playing the T.C. organ fills from the album version. Instead of rolling into “I Know You Rider,” however, the jam after the song disassembled until it drifted into a tamboura-like drone to usher in the bizarre “What’s Become of the Baby.” Seems like the whole accompaniment was electronic swoops, feedback and other strange sounds. Phil and Teresa traded verses in what was one of the more abstract and moderne pieces this band (or any) has attempted. Crazykool! The set ended with a nice extended “Cosmic Charlie.”

    I wouldn’t have guessed going into the weekend that Terrapin Station would wind up being one of the best, if not the best, set of the weekend, but that was certainly the case! (Again, I was only there Saturday; I bought a FLAC download of Sunday, and Saturday—what tremendous recordings!) It’s tough to explain what was so great about this set, but it starts with a dynamite “Estimated” that hit all of its marks with passion and precision. Once again, Sunshine and Jeff P. really added some heft with their backup vocals, and John’s guitar work was filled with fire and energy. The long concluding jam then drifted into a “Dancing in the Streets” that was like a hybrid of the Dead’s late ’70s disco interpretation of the tune (as on the Terrapin Station album) and their more melodic (and faithful) reading, circa ’69-’70 (and ’84-’85). Quite unusual, but they pulled it off. John had that percussive, chirping Garcia guitar tone from the late ’70s down perfectly. (Too bad they didn’t attempt the wild jam they used to do after the main song part in that era!) “Passenger” and “Samson” both rocked ferociously (the entrance to the latter was changed—rather than having a drum opening, it started with the chorus; a nice switcheroo), and then came the real shocker of the night: Donna Jean’s “Sunrise,” sung magnificently (and majestically) by Teresa Williams. Wow! (You can find a solid, albeit unauthorized, audience video of this tune here). And then that led directly into a “Terrapin” for the ages: Not just the “Lady with a Fan” and “Terrapin Station” sections that are usually performed, but the whole shebang, including the “Terrapin Transit” bridge (you love it on your recording of 3/18/77; the only time the Dead played it live), “At A Siding” (“while you were gone…” etc. with Bob and John trading vocals) and then the wildly exciting “Terrapin Flyer” section (which RatDog has been playing wonderfully for the past few years), totally propelled by the Beast from the East, Joe Russo, and ending up at the reprise of the “Terrapin” jam. (Here’s the same stealth videographer’s take of the last ten minutes of the suite).The transitions were flawless, the jamming expansive… Awesome!

    The evening—and the festival—concluded with a short but spirited “Not Fade Away,” and then the 9,000 or so on hand returned to their campsites or stumbled back to their cars for the drive back home. All in all, quite a weekend. We should do it again some time.

    For LOTS of cool photos from the weekend (and complete Furthur setlists), go to https://furthur.net and follow the "Setlists/Photos" link!
    16413

The Band

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  • Default Avatar
    LosAngelesGraff
    14 years 5 months ago
    I Made it
    ok i heard of the show from a friend, i thought to my self it will be a hard road but i can make it.when it came time, i had to get a day off. and at this time my car broke down so i was like how am i going to make it now. my friend said hes going in his truck with his girl so i had to hitch a ride. i asked him if i can lay in the back of his truck the drive from la there and he said no. so at this point i was like i think ill just blow my check and say rent a car get a tent get a ticket get my supplys and hit the road with a beer and a blunt. well we desided it would be cheaper if i just let them ride with me in the rental and off we went. when we arrived i felt like i knew all the major california heads by face and was so glad cause it made me feel like home. in the lott friday people were cracking brews and geting their ways about. i got my band and set my tent. at which time we drank a few more brews some jim bean and headed in to the jam session. it was so funny tho cause it was like every night i went in my head would get spun around and i would end up at my tent dancing in the road. but to be honest the hemp speakers made it just so clear from far away i still felt like i was in the show. the second day i drank as soon as i woke up and by 12 i was barfing in this lil creak, for like 5 hours. by that time every one was eating lunch and geting ready for the night. night came and every one had a sence of fear, cause the band was gonna rock so hard that we would freak out. and yes it happend some one did freak the hell out. one thing i did notice the 2nd night was that they were blasting lazers through the guitars that were over laping like a banner of colors. then i seen bill walton walking by like a sasquash. the third day was a lil slow in the morning and some what a mellow day cause every one knew it was the last night for us all. yet by noon all the smiles came out. and every one ate and watched the interview with bill n bob. as soon as night came we ran late at getting into the show but when we did i was making sure i grooved hard and well. i danced as lazers hit me and bob pointed at me. then i was again freaked out at some point and ended up at my tent again and was like fk it dancing in the road again! the next morning every one just packed up and hit the road! Thanks so much for coming out on stage to play for the world!!
  • unkle sam
    14 years 5 months ago
    wow
    very good interview again, you are on a roll. I was not there but friday sounds like it was a real gas and the rest was just icing on the cake, hopefully they can take this show on the road, let the rest of the us get these great jams too like the furthur festivals in the 90's, I would drive hours, but not days for this show, just don't have that much time anymore.
  • Default Avatar
    eddietandy
    14 years 5 months ago
    Riveting
    That was a great read, Blair; I really enjoyed it.
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15 years 7 months

Well, that was really something!

I’ve yet to encounter anyone who attended the Memorial Day weekend Furthur Festival who didn’t have an absolute blast! And why not: the music was first-rate, the weather breathtakingly beautiful, the setting perfect, even the price was right—$125 for a very full al fresco weekend of camping and music; $75 for a single day of more than 12 hours of music spread across three stages, plus the dozens of crafts booths and other cool stuff, from the Terrapin Pavilion gallery (it’s walls covered in wonderful photos and other GD memorabilia) to the ol’ Kesey bus whence the festival’s name derives, sitting in all its psychedelic glory right in the thick of it all; Zane Kesey cheerfully presiding. Food offerings were bounteous, (mostly) healthy and easily accessible. Bathroom lines weren’t too horrific. Security was present inside but basically hands-off. The large bowl where the big acts played never got hideously congested (see GD at Calaveras, 1987, for contrast), and the sound was clear and loud, even towards the back. From what I could see the one day I was there—Saturday—everyone was pretty much giving everyone else the space they needed/wanted, and the areas around the smaller stages always provided plenty of room for everyone. I didn’t see one negative vibe the whole time I was there. Indeed, this was pretty much a smile-fest all the way around. It was one of those occasions we only rarely encountered back in the old Grateful Dead days where the crowd, the place and the bands all seemed to be in perfect alignment and it really felt like our world, and all that implies. It was truly one of the mellowest and most relaxed (in a good way) concert scenes I’ve ever been a part of.

(There were, however, scattered problems in the campgrounds and outside the immediate area, with numerous drug arrests and even some violent episodes evidently caused by knucklehead dealers and anarchists—why don’t they just go away? Hopefully, these episodes, sensationally reported in the local press, of course, will not prevent this overwhelmingly positive event from taking place next year.)

It was too big to cover it all, but here are some scattershot pictures from the weekend. I’m confident y’all will also give us some of your own impressions of the music and the scene, too!

This mirror-frog sat in a field near the main stage.
Photo: Regan McMahon

First of all, the setting: The Calaveras County Fairgrounds are a few miles outside of the old Gold Rush town of Angel’s Camp, in the rolling golden foothills of the Sierra (the snow-capped peaks of which were clearly visible most of the drive up from the Bay Area). The region was immortalized in an 1865 short story by Mark Twain called “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,” and two years later that became the title of a popular collection of Twain short stories. With that sort of literary pedigree, is it any wonder that so many tourist spots in the area have frog names or imagery? Indeed, the whole Fairgrounds seems dedicated to the croaking amphibians—a sign at one of the entrances calls it “Frogtown USA,” and there are frog statues scattered around the site. Just two weeks before the Furthur Fest, the grounds hosted the annual County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee, the highlight of which is a jumping contest for the biggest, gnarliest frogs this side of the Pecos. The Furthur Festival’s addition to frogmania was a venue dubbed the Frogtown Fillmore, which was the center of some hot late night action on Friday and Saturday nights.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves a bit. Friday night, what was rather casually billed as a “soundcheck” for Furthur was actually a full-blown show by the band on the main stage, boasting an incredible set list, and the hot playing to match it. (I wasn’t there but bought CDs of it at the show on Saturday). Check it out:

Jam> The 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, Encore: Goin’ Down the Road Feeling Bad

Wow, impressive from beginning to end, and also completely unpredictable compared to Furthur’s other six sets (three each Saturday and Sunday) which were based around specific albums. The “Dark Star” and “Bird Song” were interplanetary, as you’d hope, and “Scarlet > Fire” a real barn-burner.

But wait, Friday night there was lots more late-night action at the aforementioned indoor Frogtown Fillmore, where in the wee hours, members of the weekend’s top bands got together in various configurations to rock the frickin’ house! First up was a lineup that hearkened back to most recent Phil & Friends band—Phil, Larry Campbell and Jackie Greene on guitars, but current Furthur-ites Joe Russo and Jeff Chimenti on drums and keys. They roared through “Viola Lee Blues” and “New Speedway Boogie” (which Jackie often plays with his own group), then Larry switched to fiddle and his angel-voiced wife Teresa Williams joined them for versions of “Peggy-O” and “Tennessee Jed.” Phil split and was replaced by Jackie on bass, the Campbells left, and Bob Weir came out for more “Viola Lee Blues,” followed by “Sugaree,” which also brought RatDog/Jemimah Puddleduck guitarist/singer Mark Karan to the stage for that one song. And last but not least, bassist Jack Casady and guitarist Jorma Kaukonen from Hot Tuna joined the fray (Bob still out there; Jackie switching to keyboards) and tackled “Death Don’t Have No Mercy,” “I Know You Rider” and finally, “Viola Lee Blues” one mo’ time. Not a bad start to the weekend, eh?

Both Saturday and Sunday, most of the early afternoon action at the Fairgrounds was on the two smaller outdoor stages. The Sunshine Stage, which was just a few hundred feet to the side of the main bowl stage and facing rows of actual benches (rather than being at the foot of a grassy slope like the big stage) hosted such groups as The Waybacks (probably the best-known of the bunch), Honeymoon, Carney, Maiden Lane, Common Rotation (with Dan Bern) and Blue Light River (led by Phil’s son Brian).

Just inside the main entrance, in a beautiful area of green grass surrounded by various sprawling shade trees, sat the tiny Dark Hollow acoustic music stage, presided over by Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams. I spent nearly all of Saturday afternoon there, as a parade of fine acts took to the stage. After a few numbers from Larry and Teresa (who also turned up to play at some point with everyone who graced “their” stage), Jemimah Puddleduck came on and played a fabulous set (Mark Karan and Bob Grosse on acoustic guitar and bass respectively, keyboardist John “J.T.” Thomas on accordion for the occasion, and two dynamic percussionists—Wally Ingram and Joe Chirco) that included such cool tunes “It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry,” a swingin’ take on “Don’t Let Go,” Randy Newman’s beautiful “Think It’s Gonna Rain,” Gram Parsons’ “She,” the Dead’s “Easy Wind,” and a couple of MK originals. There was lots of jamming even in this acoustic format—it was definitely some of the best music I heard at the Furthur Fest. Guitarist/singer Brian Lesh’s Americana band Blue Light River (featuring the appealing singer Lindsay Brauner) also acquitted themselves nicely (in front of proud papa Phil, who sat casually with wife Jill and friends on the lawn in the meadow) with a set that combined some original songs with covers including “Queen Jane Approximately” and, most intriguing of all, the Garcia-Paul Kantner number “The Mountain Song” from the 1971 Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra sessions… dare to be obscure! (Actually, only the chorus was from that song. The verses were written by Brian, and he calls it “Mountain Town.”)

Left: The Dark Hollow acoustic stage was jumpin' six hours a day.
Right: On the acoustic stage are (L-R) John "J.T." Thomas, Larry Campbell, Teresa Williams and Mark Karan during Jemimah Puddleduck's set. Photos: BJ

Our time at the Dark Hollow stage ended with a sparkling ten-song set by the trio of Jackie Greene, Larry (on fiddle, guitar, mando and vocals) and Teresa that opened with “Bertha,” also featured a moving “Brokedown Palace,” “Sing Me Back Home,” “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” and several others before concluding with a transcendently gorgeous “Drifting Too Far from the Shore.”

During the mid-afternoon, too, both days, the Terrapin Pavilion was packed wall to wall with hundreds of Dead Heads for a couple of loosely structured Q&A sessions moderated by Furthur media relations chief J.C. Juanis and featuring lively stories from folks like Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, photographer Herbie Greene, former GD manager Rock Scully and basketball great/World’s Tallest Dead Head Bill Walton.

Then it was over to the main stage and excellent electric sets by Jemimah Puddleduck (loved “Walk Through the Fire”) and Jackie Greene (great blues workout on “The Thrill Is Gone”; a thoroughly raucous “I’m Waiting for the Man” with guest Mark Karan; hot “Like a Ball and Chain” closer) before Furthur took the stage around 8:25, when Phil stepped to the mike and dedicated the show to Larry Campbell’s mother, Maggie, who died a couple weeks earlier. “Maggie Campbell was a great friend to all music and musicians,” Phil noted, “and one of the most vital and alive people I’ve ever known… God bless you, Maggie! Dance with us!”

Let’s see, which of the six pre-announced albums will it be?… Drum roll…All right, it’s the opening strains of “Box of Rain,” which means it’s American Beauty first! I was particularly delighted by that because even though I’d seen three of the five (unannounced) “album” nights that Phil & Friends (with Jackie and Larry) played at the Warfield in SF two years ago, I’d missed the Workingman’s Dead/American Beauty night. Of course the downside of this format is that if you know the albums well, there is no mystery about what song comes next, which has always been one of the most compelling parts of the Grateful Dead and post-Jerry bands experience. Still, it’s always fascinating to hear how it all hangs together (or not) based on the relative evolution of the tunes on each album—for instance, “Till the Morning Comes” has only been played a few times by Phil’s bands in recent years (and “Operator” even less so), while songs like “Sugar Magnolia” and “Truckin’” have, obviously, been part of the ongoing history of the GD and post-GD groups for most of the past 40 years. Larry Campbell came out and added fiddle to an excellent “Friend of the Devil,” mandolin to “Ripple” and electric guitar to a few others, and Teresa joined in on the spectacular “Attics of My Life.” I also loved John K’s heartfelt “Candyman.” “Box of Rain” featured a real jam on it for the first time in my experience, and though Phil’s “Operator” stumbled in places, it still felt “new.” “Sugar Mag,” curiously, didn’t have its “Sunshine Daydream” coda. Maybe they were going to “save it” for the end, after “Truckin’,” and forgot?

The second set was, much to my surprise, Workingman’s Dead (I thought for sure they’d save that for Sunday) and it felt even more cohesive to me than American Beauty. John K. was especially strong on his version of “High Time,” and everybody cooked on an extended “New Speedway Boogie.” As you’d hope, “Uncle John’s Band” was a glorious unifying experience (nice jam, too!); “Cumberland Blues” provided non-stop hip-shakin’ excitement; and “Casey Jones” was completely out of control by the end, just like the engineer in the song.

It was no surprise that the third “album” of the evening, Anthem of the Sun, would be the most unified and jammiest of the three—after all, that album consists of connected tunes and a ton of experimental playing. However, as well-played and exploratory as the 18-minute “Other One” in the heart of the opening “That’s It for the Other One” suite was, it was also a tad sedate and well-behaved for my tastes. Much stronger was the “New Potato Caboose,” which John nailed guitar-wise and which benefitted greatly from the vocal contributions of Sunshine Becker and recent addition Jeff Pehrson. (In fact, they were superb all weekend long; I like having that extra on-pitch male voice in the mix.) John sang lead on a solid “Alligator,” and Bob took on “Caution” and did a great job on it. Phil and Joe Russo were driving that train rhythmically, while John’s guitar danced furiously on top.

The biggest shock of the night was when they came back for an encore and introduced a brand-new song with excellent Robert Hunter lyrics called “Muli Guli.” Musically it sort of reminds me of a hybrid of “U.S. Blues” and “Pride of Cucamonga”—a Grateful Dead shuffle all the way. Phil, Bob and John traded off on the lead vocals. The set then concluded with the de rigeur (but still appreciated) “Saturday Night.” Funky New Orleans jammeisters Galactic then kept the Frogtown Fillmore rockin’ in the late, late night slot.

Here's the setting for the main stage,
amid the rolling hills of Calaveras County.
Photo: BJ

Day Three broke warm and sunny and once again saw plenty of great music on the two small stages before the Mother Hips hit the main stage in the late afternoon. On the acoustic stage, Dan Bern’s group, Common Rotation, was well-received, and Blue Light River played another set, this time joined by Phil and the older of his two musical sons, Grahame—nice to have two generations so happy together onstage! Jackie Greene and Tim Bluhm of the Mother Hips did one of their upbeat and harmony-filled Skinny Singers sets (aided by Nikki Bluhm), and country-rock singer-songwriter J.C. Flyer played a couple of his original tunes in the midst of a set by stage hosts Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams (who again offered their services to anyone who needed an extra voice or stringed instrument part at the Dark Hollow stage). For many, the highlight was undoubtedly the appearance of Hot Tuna’s Jack and Jorma and mandolinist Barry Mitterhoff (joined a bit by Larry Campbell, natch) for a set of deep country blues and old-time folk numbers. After all, Tuna was the original psychedelic acoustic group in the SF scene!

Electric Hot Tuna also smoked on the main stage during their hour-and-a-half slot. Besides Jack, Jorma and Barry, the current lineup consists of journeyman guitarist G.E. Smith (most recently with Moonalice), and drummer Skoota Warner. The red-hot band’s 11-song set included favorites such as “I See the Light,” “Rock Me Baby,” “Corners Without Exits,” “99 Year Blues” and “Bowlegged Woman, Knock-Kneed Man.” Yowza!

Furthur, Night Two: With three “albums” remaining, the biggest question was the order in which they would be played. Furthur prolonged the mystery by opening their first set with a four-and-half minute jam which finally ended up at… Baddup-Baaaaaa!...i.e. “Help on the Way”! Yeah! Blues for Allah! This should be interesting… And it was. The “Help-Slip-Frank” was powerful and (just about) perfectly executed (especially the “Slipknot!” jam.) Drummer Joe Russo—a skins-smackin’ savage all weekend—laid down a little solo before the group exploded into a ten-minute “King’s Solomon’s Marbles,” JK and Jeff C. soloing effectively during the churning middle section; the whole group negotiating every twist and turn with fluidity and ease. John’s “Crazy Fingers” was truly a thing of beauty, with a lilting final jam that went on and on, and Bob’s instrumental “Sage and Spirit” was a sonorous quartet with no drums—lovely!

But still, looming off in the distance—the 800-pound camel in the room—was the “Blues for Allah” suite. How the hell were they gonna pull that off? Really well, that’s how! Man, you’d think it had been a regular part of their repertoire these past 35 years. The vocal passages were spot-on (all the weirdly designed harmonies in place), the instrumental flights in between actually more interesting than on the Grateful Dead album (fabulous drum fills by Joe R. during the opening minutes), and I love the way after the last verse they went into this strange, raunchy blues riff for a bit (hey, it is called “Blues for Allah”) before it settled into the lovely last vocal refrain: “Under e-ter-ni-ty…” Fantastic! Quite an achievement!

The second set was Aoxomoxoa, another disc with intriguing possibilities and its own set of challenges. Now, back at the Warfield in 2008, Teresa Williams turned out to be the secret ingredient that allowed Phil & Friends (with Larry and Jackie) to navigate through the previously uncharted waters of “What’s Become of the Baby” and “Rosemary.” Well, there she was again, dueting with Phil on “Baby” when the time came; nice to have her around! But first, the “St. Stephen” kickoff was full of fire and great playing, and then right after the “what would be the answer to the answer man?” line, they lurched right into “Dupree’s,” the story passionately “told” by JK both vocally and with his guitar (aided by Larry C. on sprightly fiddle). Jeff also shone brightly on that one. Larry stayed on for “Rosemary,” etching the melody with a sweet violin line, accompanied by a simple guitar line from JK, before Phil (alone) entered with a nearly whispered first verse. Other instruments soon came in quietly, but the song stayed appropriately understated and dreamy throughout. “Doin’ That Rag” built a nice head of steam in the concluding jam (and they did sing the a capella part at the end), and then came another superbly trippy and varied “Mountains of the Moon” (with more fiddle!), followed closely by “China Cat”—always a crowd-pleaser; neat hearing Jeff playing the T.C. organ fills from the album version. Instead of rolling into “I Know You Rider,” however, the jam after the song disassembled until it drifted into a tamboura-like drone to usher in the bizarre “What’s Become of the Baby.” Seems like the whole accompaniment was electronic swoops, feedback and other strange sounds. Phil and Teresa traded verses in what was one of the more abstract and moderne pieces this band (or any) has attempted. Crazykool! The set ended with a nice extended “Cosmic Charlie.”

I wouldn’t have guessed going into the weekend that Terrapin Station would wind up being one of the best, if not the best, set of the weekend, but that was certainly the case! (Again, I was only there Saturday; I bought a FLAC download of Sunday, and Saturday—what tremendous recordings!) It’s tough to explain what was so great about this set, but it starts with a dynamite “Estimated” that hit all of its marks with passion and precision. Once again, Sunshine and Jeff P. really added some heft with their backup vocals, and John’s guitar work was filled with fire and energy. The long concluding jam then drifted into a “Dancing in the Streets” that was like a hybrid of the Dead’s late ’70s disco interpretation of the tune (as on the Terrapin Station album) and their more melodic (and faithful) reading, circa ’69-’70 (and ’84-’85). Quite unusual, but they pulled it off. John had that percussive, chirping Garcia guitar tone from the late ’70s down perfectly. (Too bad they didn’t attempt the wild jam they used to do after the main song part in that era!) “Passenger” and “Samson” both rocked ferociously (the entrance to the latter was changed—rather than having a drum opening, it started with the chorus; a nice switcheroo), and then came the real shocker of the night: Donna Jean’s “Sunrise,” sung magnificently (and majestically) by Teresa Williams. Wow! (You can find a solid, albeit unauthorized, audience video of this tune here). And then that led directly into a “Terrapin” for the ages: Not just the “Lady with a Fan” and “Terrapin Station” sections that are usually performed, but the whole shebang, including the “Terrapin Transit” bridge (you love it on your recording of 3/18/77; the only time the Dead played it live), “At A Siding” (“while you were gone…” etc. with Bob and John trading vocals) and then the wildly exciting “Terrapin Flyer” section (which RatDog has been playing wonderfully for the past few years), totally propelled by the Beast from the East, Joe Russo, and ending up at the reprise of the “Terrapin” jam. (Here’s the same stealth videographer’s take of the last ten minutes of the suite).The transitions were flawless, the jamming expansive… Awesome!

The evening—and the festival—concluded with a short but spirited “Not Fade Away,” and then the 9,000 or so on hand returned to their campsites or stumbled back to their cars for the drive back home. All in all, quite a weekend. We should do it again some time.

For LOTS of cool photos from the weekend (and complete Furthur setlists), go to https://furthur.net and follow the "Setlists/Photos" link!
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Well, that was really something!

I’ve yet to encounter anyone who attended the Memorial Day weekend Further Festival who didn’t have an absolute blast! And why not: the music was first-rate, the weather breathtakingly beautiful, the setting perfect, even the price was right—$125 for a very full al fresco weekend of camping and music; $75 for a single day of more than 12 hours of music spread across three stages, plus the dozens of crafts booths and other cool stuff, from the Terrapin Pavilion gallery (it’s walls covered in wonderful photos and other GD memorabilia) to the ol’ Kesey bus whence the festival’s name derives, sitting in all its psychedelic glory right in the thick of it all; Zane Kesey cheerfully presiding.

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I am quite jealous of these GD/family festivals you all enjoy in the summer - you all need to get over the UK and show them how its done! We have the mighty Hawkwind having another private festival over here soon, so that will be fun, but methinks i will be saving to come over there next year or 2012. Enjoy your sumer folks Peace to you all xxx #E
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I wasn't able to attend but certainly will get the recordings. I'm left a little wondering about Mr. Jackson's fierce proclamations on the nature of the scene at Angel's Camp. Looking through the threads there were several concerns expressed. The biggest, to my mind, was the security reverb shakedown due to lax security one day that turned into a quota trip the next day after the heat read the riot act (apparently) to those responsible. The second concern was that many children were left unattended by their parents. Hey, Wavy offered to take care of the kids... Otherwise, the music was better than anybody could have ever expected. We are so fortunate to still have any scene at all. The above comments are minor aberrations on an otherwise incredible weekend of fun and music. Were there jugglers, clowns, face-painters and other assorted circus types scattered about? Not to mention Uncle Sam on stilts? I hope so. It was always the icing on the cake when I went to shows.
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Blair has his own private entrance into these things and can bypass the security shakedown! :-) I'm also guessing he didn't sleep in a tent in the campground with the masses. The complaints I have heard surround those 2 areas. I am sure the music was awesome! "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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I paid for my ticket...I had no special access to anything. I went in through the main gate. I didn't camp, and only commented on the scene inside, as I never went into the campground. Even back in my much younger days I was always more of a hotel guy: "Might as well travel the elegant way" was my motto. Now, with tough economic times, I went up the one day and drove home late at night...
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Just joking around sorry sarcasm doesn't come across well when it is written. I always burn myself on that. I just pay attention to stories about security at any event - it can make or break your experience and from what I have heard it was terrible there. I am sure it depends on logistics and specific encounters - one person doesn't notice anything while another gets thrown to the ground and arrested. I also understand that stupididty of an individual can lead to security issues too. There is a time and place for security to step in I don't disagree with that but going out of their way to search for a baggie is fucking ridiculuos. Meanwhile someone else slips in with a laser pointer, pocket knife or glass bottle. Those are the items security needs to focus on. "Lazy lightning you say you never strike the same place. I want a double dose in any case" ... "You got to hear my supplication. Got to hear me now. A little bolt of inspiration"
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I think Blair was spot-on with his take on the scene. The venue security was pretty mellow, they would check a bag or backpack at the gate, but if you didn't have anything like that they would let you right in, no bottle check on your back or ankles. Since the only thing alcohol-wise inside was Sierra Nevada, if you didn't like that you had to sneak it in, which was very easy. It was also quite pricey ($8 for a 12-ounce, $12 for a 22-ounce, I think.) Once inside there was very little security - none was needed as there was a very positive vibe. It was very easy to spot people drinking beer that had to have been snuck in. Harder to spot were patrons at the Sierra trucks. The ones at the top of the hill did some business, but there was a whole section of booths at the bottom of the hill that barely sold a beer. I'm sure someone in charge saw the dismal beer sales figures and came to the conclusion there was a lot of sneakery going on, and in the afternoon on Sunday suddenly the security procedures at the gate had changed. Everyone got a brief patdown and they'd make you open any water bottles for a sniff test. But by then the weekend was almost over so it really didn't seem to cause any problems. As for the scene in the campground/lot, I didn't spend too much time out there so I can't really comment. Took a long walk around the grounds, soaking up a scene I haven't really seen since Jerry left, but there was so much cool shit going on inside that I spent most of the time in there. As for the music, Blair's description says it all. This is by far my favorite post-Jerry lineup - let's do it again next year!
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Should have known, demon alcohol. Me thinkst it's no good to plan your whole event around beer sales. Didn't the beer used to taste particularly good after a 3 1/2 hour epic show, all nice and iced down?
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It really was a wonderful festival. Being a dad with my wife and 3 young kids there, my only bummer was it was just too much to last well into the evening! Kids are up early and playing with new-found friends in the campground (which was pretty mellow in the "family campground" area), and with all the fun stuff at the kid fun-zone. Caught a lot of acoustic with them, even took my 7 year old to the first set both sat. and sunday of Furthur. But gosh, I sure did get tired out by 11pm or so and just couldn't last for all of Furthur's sets, and no way to catch a late show after the Furthur stage! But the vibe was so mellow and cool. I wouldn't want to bring my kids to a regular show experience yet, but this weekend was a complete success for my family at least. Can't wait to catch more fun in September! And we'd definitely do Furthur Festival again.
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I bought a margarita inside; not a beer drinker myself... A bit off-topic, perhaps, but I did want to mention that a friend of mine who went to see Tom Petty the other night at Oracle Arena (in Oakland) had to pay pay $30 (!) to park in the regular venue lot! And WATER inside was $6! I preferred the free parking in a field at Furthur Fest and being able to fill up my water bottle for free inside...
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I will tell you this festival far exceed my expectations and I knew it was going to be awesome. What an unbelievable 3 nights of Furthur. All the other bands were just as good and the vibe felt like the old days! I had no trouble with the security or getting in at all, I thought they were actually quite lax and knew that most of us were good people. Of course there were a few asses in the place (nitrous mafia) type people that plagued the latter days of the Grateful Dead with there bad vibes and stupidity. You'll get that anywhere, but overall the camping outside was alot of fun and kind people were everywhere. We really lucked out with the group around our campsite at the bottom of the hill near the back exit. Ok Teresa Williams did an amazing job on that sunrise for sure. Phil dropped serious bombs with his new Modulus the whole weekend. Bobby sang and played really really well. AND boy was I impressed with Joe Russo (he smoked that Terrapin) and Jeff Chiementi, shoot I saw flames coming out of the left side when would scale up and down with the keys. WOW is all I have to say. I have seen this band from the early start, first @ Hammerstein, then onto Chicago, and now Furthur Festival. They have progressively become stronger and are now in that "It" zone. I think they are by far the best post-Jerry lineup I've seen yet.....they really are taking it FURTHUR! See you next year! And there will be a Critter Cam Video coming soon so keep your eyes peeled. _____________________________________________ Will you come with me? Once in awhile you can get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right!
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Anyone go to Furthermore? What was the scene and music like there?
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I had a tremendous experience at the Memorial Day weekend shows. A buddy of mine and I cruised down from Oregon and camped (near the big parachute and the dratted rooster!) for the whole thing and it was the best festival we've been to in several years. I heard that from just about everyone I met there: Paul from Utah, Barb from Jamaica, those guys from Minnesota. The whole weekend had a great vibe and folks were really friendly. I think the security scene was pretty low key. I heard about one late-night (3 am) bust that sounded like no fun, and I saw one guy dangle some "sheets" in front of folks waiting in line at the port-a-potties. I guess he didn't notice the 3 cops standing there, but they seemed polite when they took him away. Seriously, a little discretion went a long way at these shows, in my opinion. I am keenly interested in, and have written a couple of papers on the Grateful Dead and their role as facilitators of the collective (and personal) peak experience. Without going into detail here, these latest shows -- with their preordained set lists and the addition of John K -- have given me a whole new perspective and I'm excited to be continuing my exploration of how they bring us together and help us attain a higher consciousness. Personally, I think knowing what songs were upcoming completely changed the way the crowd anticipated and reacted to the musical journey. Also, I love John on lead guitar. I think the whole experiment is a stroke of brilliance! And I also think it's one of the weirdest audience-performer relationships and band-chemistry juxtapositions ever in the history of live music! And lastly, am I the only one who thinks that Bobby's pink guitar-synth toy needs to be taken away from him, or at least turned down A LOT? It was almost unbearable at times (during Casey Jones, for instance.) It seemed to me to be so loud that he was hesitant to touch the thing. His style is usually so beautifully understated and quirky, but... I don't know. I sometimes get crazy notions about what's actually going on onstage. Am I alone in this?
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I made the 440 mile drive up from San Bernardino on Friday, after a full day of teaching high school English. Unfortunately, that put me in Angels Camp AFTER the "soundcheck" concert, and I had the joy of putting up a tent with 27 interlocking fiberglas rods all by myself at about 1:00 in the morning, surrounded by an incredibly loud campground. When the tent was up, I tossed two sleeping bags inside (one to pad the ground as a sort of mattress, the other to sleep in), and before I knew it, I was sound asleep and also managed to miss the all-star jam. Saturday and Sunday, however, were marvelous (with the exception of the outhouses that were provided for campers... UGH!). After a lazy campground breakfast (those little 8 oz. cartons of ultra-pasteurized milk can each take care of two little boxes of snack-pack cereal, and the straws make it VERY easy to convey the milk into the cereal without spilling--and they KEEP without refrigeration... just in case you were looking for camping food ideas), I pulled out a guitar and sat down behind my car, playing (fingerstyle) a variety of tunes (well-received by all who passed by or paused to listen), including Peggy-O, Friend of the Devil, Jack-a-Roe, Oh Babe It Ain't No Lie, Freight Train, Louis Collins, Loser, and a small number of non-Dead/JG tunes, including City of New Orleans and Makin' Whoopee, with a delightful visit and duet accompaniment on vocals by a lovely 20-ish "hippie chick" on Loser and a strange but fun visit by a wandering didgeridoo player. That took me up to about 9:00 AM, after which the guitar went into the trunk and I headed out to the festival to hear people who were a LOT better than me. It was nice to wander the grounds well ahead of the musicians' appearances, because I got to check out the booths while they were uncrowded. Got a very good look at the Further Bus and met Zane Kesey (bought two of his hand-painted toy Further Buses and got him to sign both of them--he's very people-oriented). Took the tour of the mini-museum and saw the instruments and artwork, and felt really cool about being in the presence of such history. Around 11:30 I wandered down to the Sunshine Stage and watched the full set by Blue Light River, which was quite nice. I wanted to hear Mark Karan and Jackie Greene in their acoustic sets, though, so I headed up the steps toward the Dark Hollow Stage. As I climbed up, who should I happen to meet, coming down, but Phil! Not knowing what the hell to say, I lamely asked, "Hello, Phil! What order are you doing the three sets in tonight?" Phil paused a moment, then ticked off on his fingers, "American Beauty, Workingman, and Anthem." I grinned stupidly, said, "Thank you, sir!" and we each continued on our respective paths. I got to the acoustic stage in time for the last half of Mark Karan's set, then stayed around for Jackie Greene and about half of Blue Light River's acoustic set before deciding to secure a good place near the main stage. Loved the Puddleduck set, thought that Jackie was absolutely on fire for his electric set, and was mesmerized by the three Furthur sets. It had been a long Saturday piled on top of a short night's sleep and an even longer Friday, so I forewent the Galactic show and caught some sleep. Dragged my sorry old carcass out of the tent around 11 am Sunday (how does that saying go... "I'm getting too old for this sh*t?") and made my way straight to the Dark Hollow Stage, where I parked myself from 11:45 until 5:30. You see, I'd noticed that the map/program promised "very special guests" and I had a feeling that it would be an Acoustic Hot Tuna show, somewhere along the way. Absolutely LOVED Common Rotation, and then came the fun surprise of the day: Blue Light River showed up again, this time joined by Grahame Lesh on guitar, and who should come wandering into the crowd on the lawn, accompanied by his lovely lady, but Phil. He spots a clear space, big enough for two, about ten feet to my left, and settles down to watch his sons, with a grin on his face that was probably as big as the one I'd had when I briefly spoke to him on Saturday. He was settled in for the long haul there, knees drawn up in front of him and both arms wrapped around his shins, and he managed to stay put for more than five minutes--one gets the feeling, watching Phil, that he is an absolute bundle of energy waiting to be unleashed (unLeshed?). With a hasty "I'll be right back" to his love, he popped up again and ambled down behind the tapers' microphones to listen to the sound mix, then made three or four trips back and forth to and from the mixing board to advise the engineer about how to balance the microphones. When he was satisfied, he disappeared (he never DID get "right back," and his lovely lady figured out around that time that he had other ideas on his mind, so she gathered their stuff and headed off). In the background, I saw a roadie bring out an electric bass (4 string, looked like an Alembic Tribute bass) and then Phil's head appeared behind the band. By the time the next song started up, Phil was playing along with both of his sons for at least four songs, the highlights of which were "Cortez the Killer" and a marvelous "Hard to Handle." After BLR and the two bonus Leshes left the stage, the veteran Deadhead next to me (we'd been talking for about two hours by then--nothing like the Dead community to create instant friendships) said that he figured he'd go see the last act on the Sunshine Stage before heading over to the main stage area. I saw a familiar face onstage, though, and I said, "You might want to rethink that idea, because that's Barry Mitterhoff, and where you find Barry, Jorma and Jack can't be far behind." He replied, "I don't think they'll do an acoustic Tuna set, and I don't see Jorma, anyway." "I do," I said. "He's leaning on the railing, at the back of the right side of the stage." "Yeah, but I don't think Casady will be here." "He will. A roadie just put Jack's bass onto a stand behind Barry." "Hmmm... guess I'll stick around, after all..." Larry Campbell sat in with them (the weekend was almost a Fur Peace teachers' reunion) and introduced Barry, Jack, and then, "Look here, it's Jorma!" Wonderful set, highlighted, I thought, by Jorma's new song, "River of Time" (check it out--superb new solo album). The pity was that only about 500 people saw the acoustic Tuna set, which was a true gem. Much as I wanted to stick around for Larry Campbell's set, I had already told some new friends (met on Saturday) that I would join them to watch The Mother Hips (they're friends with some of the band). Highly entertaining show by some superb musicians. Then came Electric Hot Tuna, and they reminded the crowd that you don't have to wear leather/spikes/makeup or strike dramatically angry poses to be the HEAVIEST band in the history of rock. Killer show, and one I'd have happily welcomed as the night's headliner, had Furthur chosen to only perform on one night instead of all three. Then came the first of the three Furthur sets, this time a mystery to me, since I hadn't bothered to ask Phil for more insider information when he was sitting ten feet away (even rock gods deserve some privacy, especially when they doff the rock god persona and don the proud daddy one). Blues for Allah was incredible, especially hearing the full title song, which really never got performed live by the GD in anything resembling its entirety. Aoxomoxoa was fabulous, including What's Become of the Baby (which--I checked--isn't even listed here on dead.net's lyrics pages, and is probably as unplayed as anything else on the band's records). The true capper, though, was Terrapin, with the incredible (and unexpectedly powerful) rendition of Donna Jean's song, Sunrise, by Teresa Williams. If there was anything disappointing about the show, it was that Sunday featured only a single encore song (NFA), instead of the two songs (One More Saturday Night and Muli Guli--or is it Muly Guly? I've seen it both ways...) performed on Saturday. I was elated and exhausted. Hung around to pick up my CD set of the evening's Furthur show and staggered back to my tent, slept like a log. The drive home, a mere 437 miles due to a shortcut to bypass Stockton, went by in a flash, to the sounds of three different shows from '78, '91, and '77 (I saved the six Furthur CDs for when I got home). Never did unpack the guitar again after that first morning--woke up too late and had too many performances to see.
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Sounds like you had a pretty broad and all-encompassing experience between the campground and the shows!
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The music is what most people come here for, that was the beauty of the orchestrated festival... The scene associated with this type of music does not belong at a place where children are present, unless the children are closely supervised.. The music on the other hand was beautiful. The soul that was put into this festival should not be ruined. Terrapin Station was performed beautifully. (Note: Sunrise) The sets on Saturday were life changing and eye-opening, and hopefully people can see the love and peace in the eyes of the music.
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Mostly positive things about the "full album" concept. Though it seems to be becoming less of a novelty as more bands do it (My Morning Jacket has just announced their intention to play all five of their studio albums live, for example), I very much like the idea. Living as we seem to be in the post-album iTunes-download-just-the-songs-that-you-like era, the album as an artform in and of itself seems to be taking a major hit. The concept that an album of songs can be a "the whole is greater than the sum of it's parts" proposition is facing tough times in this pervasive a la carte music biz trend. Sure, there's the downside of knowing what's coming next (catching Springsteen doing "Born to Run" last year, after hearing "Meeting Across the River", my buddy leaned over to me and deadpanned, "Man, I hope they play 'Jungleland' tonight"), but there's also the thrill of hearing songs that seldon/never get played in concert, and quite often the whole IS greater than the sum of its parts. So....I'm very jealous of everyone who had a chance to catch THIS one in person, and looking forward to getting my hands on recordings of the sets so that I can listen and enjoy at least the music part of the experience.
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There really is no downside to knowing what's coming next at a concert. We pretend that there is, being spoiled Deadheads who have either attended or listened to multi-day runs at the same venue in which no song (other than "Drums/Space," which is more of an exploration than a song) is played twice within a 3 day period (remember how long it took The Dead to repeat even ONE song during the '09 tour?). However, I recall going to see Jethro Tull in 1977 in January and again in April, and not only were the setlists 95%+ identical (and a check of the frustratingly incomplete online setlists for that tour shows around 95% identical lists on EVERY night), but Ian Anderson's between-song banter and jokes were VERY familiar--essentially, rehearsed and memorized--at the second of the two shows. Led Zeppelin's tours were notorious for having more highly prized bootleg recordings of certain shows because those few shows included one (and, on rare occasions, as many as two!) song that was only played three or four times during the tour, but with almost no other variation between sets on a daily basis. I saw The Doobie Brothers at the Swing Auditorium back in 1979 or '80--I don't have a ticket stub on it anymore, and I can't find an online tourdate archive for the Doobies, but I'm leaning toward '79 because Jeff Baxter was still in the band and they played a strong show, with one oddity: the audience refused to leave after their second encore, even with the lights up, and the band got literally pulled back onstage to play another song so that the crowd wouldn't get unruly. Patrick Simmons came to the mike and thanked the audience, but also apologized, saying that the band had literally played every song that they had rehearsed for the tour, and asked if it was OK to reprise "Black Water" (it was, and yes, the crowd left happy). Imagine that, friends, a band with at least 8 original studio records out in the stores, running out of material after a two-and-a-half hour show... Therefore, what's the big deal about knowing exactly what song comes next in any of three consecutive nights in which nothing got repeated? However, I am looking forward to being surprised by every song played at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles (the only two songs I'm almost certain will NOT be played are "One More Saturday Night" and "Samson & Delilah," since it's a Tuesday show...).
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I, for one, had a great time at this Festival. Friday's "Soundcheck" was an especially wonderful treat and musically for me was the highlight of the weekend. It was the first thing most people I talked to asked about "Where you here Friday?". It was possibly the best single set of music I've heard since 1995, and dare I say, was better in some ways then many Grateful Dead shows I saw through the years. I met and camped next to a guy named Giles, from California. GILES, if you read this I'd love to get in contact with you, so log in and drop me a message. We were in the PT Cruiser with WA State plates which read "Furthur". You had lost your wallet on the last day. I hope it turned up. Thanks Blair for a great review of what you did see. Aside from being unable to stay up for the late night Jam session on Friday, I saw everything I wanted to and did so with ease. The security issues were non-existant for me until the last night when we exited and the police blocked the entrance to our campsite. Okay, so where were we supposed to go? There was a lack of good organization upon arrival as well but all the little problems were just that: little. A great time for sure! -For those who were there, no explanation is necessary... For those who were not, none is possible.
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That was a great read, Blair; I really enjoyed it.
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very good interview again, you are on a roll. I was not there but friday sounds like it was a real gas and the rest was just icing on the cake, hopefully they can take this show on the road, let the rest of the us get these great jams too like the furthur festivals in the 90's, I would drive hours, but not days for this show, just don't have that much time anymore.
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ok i heard of the show from a friend, i thought to my self it will be a hard road but i can make it.when it came time, i had to get a day off. and at this time my car broke down so i was like how am i going to make it now. my friend said hes going in his truck with his girl so i had to hitch a ride. i asked him if i can lay in the back of his truck the drive from la there and he said no. so at this point i was like i think ill just blow my check and say rent a car get a tent get a ticket get my supplys and hit the road with a beer and a blunt. well we desided it would be cheaper if i just let them ride with me in the rental and off we went. when we arrived i felt like i knew all the major california heads by face and was so glad cause it made me feel like home. in the lott friday people were cracking brews and geting their ways about. i got my band and set my tent. at which time we drank a few more brews some jim bean and headed in to the jam session. it was so funny tho cause it was like every night i went in my head would get spun around and i would end up at my tent dancing in the road. but to be honest the hemp speakers made it just so clear from far away i still felt like i was in the show. the second day i drank as soon as i woke up and by 12 i was barfing in this lil creak, for like 5 hours. by that time every one was eating lunch and geting ready for the night. night came and every one had a sence of fear, cause the band was gonna rock so hard that we would freak out. and yes it happend some one did freak the hell out. one thing i did notice the 2nd night was that they were blasting lazers through the guitars that were over laping like a banner of colors. then i seen bill walton walking by like a sasquash. the third day was a lil slow in the morning and some what a mellow day cause every one knew it was the last night for us all. yet by noon all the smiles came out. and every one ate and watched the interview with bill n bob. as soon as night came we ran late at getting into the show but when we did i was making sure i grooved hard and well. i danced as lazers hit me and bob pointed at me. then i was again freaked out at some point and ended up at my tent again and was like fk it dancing in the road again! the next morning every one just packed up and hit the road! Thanks so much for coming out on stage to play for the world!!
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I was at the show and had a blast--mostly. Amazing music and wildly fun time with friends old and new. I agree with Blair's comment about knuckle head dealers and anarchists, they should go away. I was in family camp with kids hanging out and someone let her pit bull off the leash. It then chased after my buddy's kid and shit in the middle of our camp. When we asked her to leash it, she got on our case for being uptight. There were a lot of buffoons there who obviously came, not for the music, but because they smelled a profit or monster buzz. I remember when the drugs raised our collective consciousness, not caused us to get angry and belligerent then puke, and pass out. It reminded me of some of those shows back in the final years. As for the police and security. I saw the official police hassle no one unless they were clearing fixing to be hassled with. I even talked with one of them about that. One guy started going off about the number of cops and firemen and how we should throw them all out. I don't know about that. If I slopped on that hill and broke my ankle, I wouldn't mind having a cop and fireman around to take care of me. Likewise, I saw some woman had a seizure in the market area on Sunday. Fortunately there were some EMTs and nurses on hand. I'm no fan of cops or authority, but until we can police ourselves completely, effectively, and safely, they're going to have to be there. Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, it was a great play with tons of excellent music. The Friday night sound check blew me away; Blues for Allah beginning to end rocked, and Hot Tuna's unannounced show at the acoustic stage could not have been cooler
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I flew out to Mt aire from CO with my 5 year old daughter.We had a wonderful camping spot,the weather was epic, the music was fabulous,the scene was grate in pockets;Just had to poke around, the food vending was decent(They could of done better in that dept.), the GD archive artwork was really kewl, the interviews were awesome, & the family vibe was really grate. I was dancing near Bill Walton sunday night.All the hob-knobs of GD family were there. Yea, there was the grimey.But thats part of the balance of GD family.Ugly,but real. I did notice some children unattended inside the venue;One was playing with my daughter.I don't care about what scene it is, my daughter NEVER leaves my sight or hearing.I also noticed drunk spun-uns in the family tent,which really irked me too. We were camping with ole school family & friends & I had a huge family network around me & my daughter.It was quite magical when I pulled in with my planned family,that I saw my old roommate & really good buddy from OR & then another longtime sister buddy of mine from santa cruz.So they camped with our crew too.It was just str8 up magic all weekend. I was in bed early most nights, but saw most of the friday show,was in bed after the hightime sat night, & saw most of the sunday show.I had to head back to the camp early due to the family obilgations. But could here the music at the camp very vividly.I personally liked the sunday show the best.The passenger ,dancing,& est. were off the charts. The terrapin suite was mind blowin. The blues for allah was really kewl too.Usually I am not in the mood for that spacey sands & marbles stuff, but it fit the mood nicely. Overall,It was a lot of work flying out with all my camping gear & a 5 year old. I would have prefered having a RV.But due to lack of info about RV camping(Which previously said that there was going to be NO RV camping,then later announced that there was limited RV spaces,which I saw quite a bit RVs.It would have been easier to fly in & rent a RV instead of hauling out all my tent camping gear+childs camping gear+childs entertainment stuff+clothes+a stop a wal-mart for coolers,chairs,etc...) I actually emailed the furthur info email 3 times about bringing in a class B,NEVER even got a response! Which really pissed me off.I didn't wanna commit to a RV if I knew I Had to fly in & there was a chance that I could of got rejected at the gate.But like I said NEVER even got a response so I committed to the tent camping scenerio. But we made the best of it & had a grate time. Bottomline, I am not happy with who ever is in charge of making sure the emails are answered & the info for this fest was lack luster at best.Lots of vague info. I heard that Phils wife is the one in charge,so she needs to hire a better staff in my opinion. whew....Ok got that off my chest. It was worth every moment,but would have liked to see a better informed website. "Walk me out in the morning dew"
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I flew out to Mt aire from CO with my 5 year old daughter.We had a wonderful camping spot,the weather was epic, the music was fabulous,the scene was grate in pockets;Just had to poke around, the food vending was decent(They could of done better in that dept.), the GD archive artwork was really kewl, the interviews were awesome, & the family vibe was really grate. I was dancing near Bill Walton sunday night.All the hob-knobs of GD family were there. Yea, there was the grimey.But thats part of the balance of GD family.Ugly,but real. I did notice some children unattended inside the venue;One was playing with my daughter.I don't care about what scene it is, my daughter NEVER leaves my sight or hearing.I also noticed drunk spun-uns in the family tent,which really irked me too. We were camping with ole school family & friends & I had a huge family network around me & my daughter.It was quite magical when I pulled in with my planned family,that I saw my old roommate & really good buddy from OR & then another longtime sister buddy of mine from santa cruz.So they camped with our crew too.It was just str8 up magic all weekend. I was in bed early most nights, but saw most of the friday show,was in bed after the hightime sat night, & saw most of the sunday show.I had to head back to the camp early due to the family obilgations. But could here the music at the camp very vividly.I personally liked the sunday show the best.The passenger ,dancing,& est. were off the charts. The terrapin suite was mind blowin. The blues for allah was really kewl too.Usually I am not in the mood for that spacey sands & marbles stuff, but it fit the mood nicely. Overall,It was a lot of work flying out with all my camping gear & a 5 year old. I would have prefered having a RV.But due to lack of info about RV camping(Which previously said that there was going to be NO RV camping,then later announced that there was limited RV spaces,which I saw quite a bit RVs.It would have been easier to fly in & rent a RV instead of hauling out all my tent camping gear+childs camping gear+childs entertainment stuff+clothes+a stop a wal-mart for coolers,chairs,etc...) I actually emailed the furthur info email 3 times about bringing in a class B,NEVER even got a response! Which really pissed me off.I didn't wanna commit to a RV if I knew I Had to fly in & there was a chance that I could of got rejected at the gate.But like I said NEVER even got a response so I committed to the tent camping scenerio. But we made the best of it & had a grate time. Bottomline, I am not happy with who ever is in charge of making sure the emails are answered & the info for this fest was lack luster at best.Lots of vague info. I heard that Phils wife is the one in charge,so she needs to hire a better staff in my opinion. whew....Ok got that off my chest. It was worth every moment,but would have liked to see a better informed website. "Walk me out in the morning dew"
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------------------------------(----@It was a great way to enjoy a part of the festival as I had costal-wrongsidedness. I have listened and watched many clips now and feel the bands really nailed these tunes. I am continuing my quest for seeing and hearing a little... more, as the days dwindle to Summer Tour 2010. Kudos to the MUSIC MAKERS! I have loved having such an array of my favorite music "kinda" live via the internet. I had many dear friends in attendance and did get a phone call over the weekend and got to listen to a few moments of music streaming over the cell phone in the wee hours of the East Coast morning dew. (EST) This was such a nice hearty piece of writing, I can't thank you enough...thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you! -----------------------(-----@ My friends found some beautiful roses growing there and said they smelled wonderful. I have some more grate reading to do with the JK write-up and will get caught up with you on that later. Thanks for taking the time to capture the beauty, family and friends with your "art"icle but mostly for the awesome description of the MUSIC! I think that holiday is offically, "MEMORIAL". So glad you took the time to do such a fine job for thoes who weren't able to attend in the flesh but were there in spirit! ---------------(----@ In peace and lovingkindness for you and ALL in "our world". A world of peace, love and sweetness for ALL. Thanks to everyone who contributed to this thread with your stories and travels (ALL of Ya's), I've felt like a virtural traveler with you. It's been mostly nice to hear your tales from the rolling hills of the other-side. Peace Forever. ------------------------------(----@ X~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SherBear
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I was the most knaRLY "CUBENSIS" ABORT !
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------------------(-----@Peace and lovingkindness to you and yours, SherBear
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I was not really sure what to espect since I haven't seen the boys in a while and have been away from the scene. But memorial day weekend deffinatley took me back to my touring days and the family vibe was all around! Since my hubby and I got to the fair grounds early Friday morning we got a great camping site right in front of the bond fire area. We had the best neighbors anyone could have ever asked for and hung with them all weekend. Friday nights "Soud Check" witch was acualy a full show jammed the night away. I was getting down so hard on the hill all night that I was sore from my ankles to my knees the rest of the weekend. Unfortunatley I fell alsleep after the boys played that night and didn't make the killer after show. My neighbors told us about it in the morning and I was really bummed that I missed it. Saturday morning was super mellow, We stopped by the Sun Shine stage to see Phil's son's band. It was so nice to see Phil under a tent right next to all the phans. He seems like such a down to earth person and i have just so much respect for him and the music he plays. Saturday night started the one disc per set. I really wasn't all that excited about hearing a CD played through because one of my favorite things about going to a dead show is you never know what they are going to play or what songs they are going to mix together. When you se the dead you never hear the same song played the same ever. Thats another reason why I love them so much. But I have to say that even though i knew what song was comming next they swept me away with there jams and had me dancing another night away. Galatic was so funky that i had to push myself to dance even more. After Galatic I headed to the drum circle and drummed until the sun came up. Since I was up until the early mornin on Sat I had a hard time waking up on Sunday. I hung at camp for most of the day Sunday to try and spare as much engery as I could for the last night of Further. They kicked off the night with the album “Blues for Allah", witch was amazing but then went to a very dark, slow, spacey place with Aoxomoxoa. Since the music seemed to be taking me to a very weird and strange place I had to head back to camp and listen to the rest in my tent. I will have to purchased the MP3 of the Terripan sets. I am so mad that I missed it. But all in all I was very impressed with the music and the vibe of the scene. I just wish that all you junky festies that are just there for the drugs give our scene a bad name. Its one thing to "have a good time" and let your mind travel with the music but its another to just get messed up the whole time and never even go into the show because you don't even care about the music. Sorry I had to get that off my chest. Those are the poeple that give our family a bad name and they arn't even part of it. I hope Further keeps on trucking with taking the music Further.
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I agree with you on the bad druggie/party sceners only, although I must say, most of the time I only ran into kind real Deadheads when I was there. I guess it was cuz I got lucky. I made up a movie of the festival that will bring back all the memories, AND I made up a live sounboard spliced with video of Terrapin and Teresa Williams belting her heart out at the end. Hope this will at least fulfill some of what you missed. Please enjoy this...and I wish I could have met up with you @ the bonfire but like you said, I was so TIRED (we must be getting old). It really did feel like old time touring daze though.

Furthur Festival 2010 Critter Cam from Khat Baker on Vimeo.

Furthur Festival~Critter Cam

Furthur Festival Angels Camp, CA May 28th-30th, 2010
From the Critter Cam, pictures, movies of the band, and tidbits. With Soundboards from all 3 nights. This is one heck of a movie...grab some popcorn and a beverage. It's a sit down and enjoy. Time for the best Critter Cam yet!

Furthur, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, John Kadlecik, Joe Russo, Jeff Chimenti
Special Guests:
Hot Tuna, Maiden Lane, Blue Light River, Mark Karan & Jemimah Puddleduck, Larry Campbell & Teresa Williams, Galactic just to name a few.

Love is Real!
Canyon Critter

_____________________________________________ Will you come with me? Once in awhile you can get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right!
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Nothin' like some great FAN ART! Really well done, Canyon Critter--you really captured some of that indescribable spirit, as well as the great vibes of the Big Adventure! Thanks for posting it!
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Was going for the "Feel like your there" type vibe for those who weren't there, as well as those who were, and it means alot to me that you liked it. Wish I had a "real" video program, couldn't imagine what I could do with that. It was a great festival and I really hope I can come home to California next year for the same type of Magic @ Frogtown, USA._____________________________________________ Will you come with me? Once in awhile you can get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right!
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We watched your film last night - nice job! I love the opening sequence cause you included the journey to the show which is as much an adventure as the music. I was just getting into the still shots of the shows, when WHAM.. it's video of Terrapin & At A Siding... holy mutha, the sound is surprisingly tight. These guys have obviously been practising and they're gelling as a unit. Great playing - what a trip! Must have been pretty exciting for all in attendance. They just get better with age. Can't wait for SUMMER TOUR!! Maybe they'll break out some of the material they learned again for Frogtown for us Easterners. (Terrapin at Rochester??) What a treat. Thank you so much for letting us share in the spirit of the weekend. I'd been following with reviews and audio, but to see the experience presented in this way was so inspiring. I am GRATEFUL to you and all the musicians, organizers and family who turned out to make history once again. I'm still wondering.. could anyone fill me in on how the FURTHURMORE fest was? Peace, Kirsten
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Last fall my hubby and I attended Phish Festival 8 in Indio, CA (actually our first Phish shows) and while there kept saying to each other "Hey Bobby, Hey Phil, how about a festival of our own." Well they sure did it! So glad they did. Our experience was beautiful and everyone we came in contact with was kind and loving. The setting was perfect place for hippies...a town dedicated to kindness - how perfect is that? The food was yummy, the weather perfect and well the music... phenomenal. Prior to Furthur Fest we have seen the band 9x. Each time better than the last. This was no exception. They really delivered and we loved the special guests. What a blessing it was. I do hope this will be an annual event. It was well worth the journey there and back. After all, it is all about the journey and not so much the destination...good times were had by all. Many thanks to Blair for the terrific write up and Canyon Critter for the video!!!
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Wow Critter,that movie was really something. It really did bring me back to the fest and I got to hear all the music I missed. I also went ahead and purchased the last night so I can have terripan. Thanks again!
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OMG, your video is awesome!It was wonderful hanging out and watching it. Thank you for putting that out there to be enjoyed. You made me smile! :) Bravo! ------------------------------(------@ Love, light and peace, SherBear Keep the Critter Cam Rolling! @@@@@@@@@@ @CANYON CRITTER@ @@@@@@@@@@
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OK, um, so Billy and Mickey aren't playing with Furthur because why?
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cuz they are going furthur in their own way. s'all good.