• https://www.dead.net/features/blairs-golden-road-blog/blair-s-golden-road-blog-ratdog-reunion-tri
    Blair’s Golden Road Blog - A RatDog Reunion at TRI

    I’m writing this the morning after RatDog’s (1/25/12) reunion show at Bob Weir’s TRI Studios complex in San Rafael, Marin County. I haven’t scoured the Internet to gauge fan reaction to the free webcast and I have no idea what it looked or sounded like out there in the real world. I want to jot down my thoughts—free of outside influences—about what it was like being in the room at TRI experiencing the show live.

    This was my second trip to TRI; the first was for Slightly Stoopid’s pay-per-view webcast in mid-September of last year—I wrote a technical story about the facility for Mix magazine based on that event. (What a good band! They were quite a revelation to me.) On that afternoon, most of the people there were either working on the actual production of the webcast—between camera operators, sound engineers, mixers, telecast production personnel and regular office staff, that’s a lot of folks—or somehow connected to the band. As a Southern California group, Slightly Stoopid didn’t have many Bay Area friends stopping by for their private event, so the off-camera in-studio audience was probably around 30 people; it was very loose and spacious.

    I had suspected that RatDog, playing for the first time in a couple of years, with an expanded roster that included such distinguished alums as saxophonist Dave Ellis, guitarist Steve Kimock and bassist Rob Wasserman, performing on Weir’s “home court,” would probably attract a much larger crowd. It did. I’d estimate that there were well over 100 people on hand, most of them actual family or friends of the musicians or TRI employees (plus Rob Wasserman’s stately standard poodle, Mingus). Bob’s wife and kids were there, as was his genteel, mustachio’d father, Jack, who sat right in front of Jeff Chimenti’s keyboard setup. Also on hand were former GD roadie Steve Parish, Garcia’s daughter Keelin and her mom Manasha Matheson, and various others from the Dead family.

    Before the show, there was a lot of milling about in the corridors and in spacious Studio 2, which had been transformed into the party room for the night: It had cheery Chinese lanterns hanging from the ceiling, a couple of couches, some tables and chairs and, most important of all, beer and wine. Meanwhile, people who were actually involved in the production scurried through the crowded hallways to deal with last-minute details. Mike McGinn, who has been associated with RatDog for many years, was the main mixer; he was ensconced in the studio’s state-of-the-art control room. Justin Kreutzmann, who has been part of the TRI team from the outset, directed the webcast from the video suite.

    Bob, Mark and Steve at TRI.
    Photo: Bob Minkin/minkindesign.com © 2012

    The show began promptly at 5 p.m. (as others have, to better accommodate East Coast viewers), evidently catching some of the late-arriving audience off-guard—at first downbeat of the short jam that wound up at “The Music Never Stopped,” the place was only about half-full. Regan and I managed to snag a couple of spots right in front on the left side, and when I say “in front,” I mean less than ten feet from Jeff’s keyboard setup, and about the same distance from the smiling, always boppin’ sax duo of Kenny Brooks and Dave Ellis, and from Bob’s microphone. There’s no stage, so we were right on their level and it really felt like being part of the band. Directly in front of us at our feet were dolly tracks for a camera which moved very slowly in front of the stage throughout the evening, while other camera operators traversed the area between us and the musicians. I couldn’t see guitarists Kimock or Mark Karan as much as I would have liked to, but I could hear them fine.

    The sound in Studio One is almost supernaturally clean and clear, and not overly loud. Due to our proximity to the players, we could hear the saxophones, Jeff Chimenti’s piano and even Bob’s lead vocals off the stage, in addition to what was coming from the crystalline Meyer loudspeakers hanging from the low ceiling. We could literally feel the sound coming directly from Jeff’s swirling Leslie organ speaker, and see the reflection of his moving fingers on the shiny black front of his Yamaha grand. Bob was right at our eye level—a very interesting perspective, to say the least. It’s amazing that he can maintain his concentration singing and playing when there are cameras right in his face, but I guess he’s had a few years to get used to that. It probably helped that so many pretty women finagled spots in the front.

    Because of the way I experienced the show—completely immersed in the sound and with a mostly unfettered visual connection to the players—it’s hard for me to be objective about the music. I could hear each musician better than I ever had before, and I could also hear every word Bob sang, which brought a greater depth of meaning to some of the songs I knew less well than Grateful Dead classics, such as “Even So” > “October Queen” > “The Deep End,” “Money for Gasoline,” “Two Djinn” and “Ashes and Glass.” With the exception of “Money for Gasoline” (my favorite of his post-GD output), all those songs—plus “Corrina,” which they also did a killer version of at TRI—appeared on RatDog’s underrated 2000 album, Evening Moods, and the band seemed to invest all of them with a little extra juice. These tunes are, after all, the keystones of their shared original repertoire.

    For a group that hadn’t played together for two years—and in the case of Kimock, Ellis and Wasserman, even longer—they sounded amazingly together, and there’s no question they were having a ball. The ebullient Jay Lane looked so excited at times he could barely contain himself at his drum kit, and it was wonderful being so close to the Sax Bros as they traded smiles and fond glances at each other and the others all night. You could feel that everyone was in the flow, and that led to a certain effortless quality to the music, as if they’d instantly picked up where they left off. That’s ingrained telepathy in action.

    Of course, with this unique configuration, the overall sound was a little different. Kimock and Mark Karan complemented each other beautifully, with Steve playing a lot of slide accents, and Mark maybe soloing a little more. I felt Steve was kind of laid-back during some of the first set, but he stepped out more in the second. Mark was on fire all night, although the sheer size of the band and the fact that they’re all incredible players meant that there weren’t too many opportunities for Mark—or anyone—to go completely crazy with solos. That said, the music didn’t feel at all restrained to me.

    I wouldn’t have predicted this in advance, but I thought in some ways Kenny and Dave stole the show with their dynamic, spot-on sax parts. Whether it was the great, nearly big-band-sounding unison flourishes they added to the excellent version of “Eyes of the World,” or the way their parts diverged as “Bird Song” ascended during its big jam, they always seemed to dial in the perfect mood and feeling. I especially liked it when Dave played soprano sax on several songs (Kenny played tenor throughout)—in the hands of a master, that instrument has such a crying, human sound. Then there was their brief duel during “Stuff” (the name given to RatDog’s jazzy freeform improv—sans Bob—that traditionally comes late in the second set), where they were toe-to-toe, cheeks puffing furiously, blowing fast and hard. Yeah! Gimme some more of that!

    Jeff was his usual brilliant self all night, adding just the right textures to every song, mostly on piano, as it turned out, though there were also big blasts of B-3 filling the air here and there, and one cool passage I recall where he was playing piano with his right hand and Fender Rhodes with his left. Jay confidently negotiated the myriad styles and tempos, pushing the band when they needed a little kick (like during “Cassidy,” which started out a tad slow) but also providing plenty of space for the others when things quieted down.

    (L to R): Jeff, Kenny, Rob, Dave, Jay, Bob, Mark and Steve.
    This was almost exactly my view (minus the wide-angle perspective).
    Photo: Bob Minkin/minkindesign.com © 2012

    My only regret with being so close to the band is that I could not hear Rob Wasserman very well. I have a tremendous amount of respect for him and I know he is a monster player, but from my vantage point he was behind Kenny and Dave (who were practically in my face), and even though I could see him working furiously, the sound of his stand-up bass just didn’t cut through some of the time. (Maybe his Clevinger bass would have?) There were exceptions—like when he was artfully navigating through the wide open spaces of “Bird Song”—but I would have liked to hear him more. I was also disappointed that we didn’t get to hear one of his amazing solos. (RatDog’s bass player the last several years, Robin Sylvester, was supposed to be part of the reunion, but has been dealing with some serious health issues and was unable to join them for this gig. Bob dedicated the encore—a lovely version of “Ripple”—to Robin. He was missed!)

    A few favorite songs/moments from the evening: “Money for Gasoline,” which had an exciting Caribbean lilt; “Ashes and Glass,” the first-set closer, jammed out expansively; Bob’s moving acoustic take on “Peggy-O”; “Corrina,” sounding great with horn punctuation; “Bird Song”; and “Days Between,” which was haunting and emotional and built verse by verse to amazing peaks.

    All in all, it was quite the love-fest onstage and in the crowd. The place was both buzzing and glowing at the end of the night. It’s scary to think how good this group could be if they actually stayed together and toured (and if Robin could join them). But that’s not going to happen anytime soon. So, for now, we must be satiated by this often magnificent and thoroughly satisfying one night stand.

    Let’s do it again, boys!

    338291

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    sherbear
    12 years 9 months ago
    ----------TRIStudios----(----@
    Nice read...and from out here in the world>>>if you think YOU were close to the band... YOU should have been at my house. WOW! Put a whole new meaning to riding the rail! I was hanging out with some Eskimos no less. Now next feature to add it is the audience controlled camera, special feature, additional cost. Hey build it and they they will...um yeah. Hey you never know.... I think TRI Studios is awesome and it will be the destination of any Artist looking to participate in Worldly market. "TRI is limitless", -Sherry B. It is the greatest place, unquestionable, tri me. Okay, we had a great time at my place and a better view than you. Glad you got to be there! There will still be nothing like a live experience.
  • castle17
    12 years 9 months ago
    jerry
    That was way too negative.... Call it a bad night and let it go.
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15 years 7 months

I’m writing this the morning after RatDog’s (1/25/12) reunion show at Bob Weir’s TRI Studios complex in San Rafael, Marin County. I haven’t scoured the Internet to gauge fan reaction to the free webcast and I have no idea what it looked or sounded like out there in the real world. I want to jot down my thoughts—free of outside influences—about what it was like being in the room at TRI experiencing the show live.

This was my second trip to TRI; the first was for Slightly Stoopid’s pay-per-view webcast in mid-September of last year—I wrote a technical story about the facility for Mix magazine based on that event. (What a good band! They were quite a revelation to me.) On that afternoon, most of the people there were either working on the actual production of the webcast—between camera operators, sound engineers, mixers, telecast production personnel and regular office staff, that’s a lot of folks—or somehow connected to the band. As a Southern California group, Slightly Stoopid didn’t have many Bay Area friends stopping by for their private event, so the off-camera in-studio audience was probably around 30 people; it was very loose and spacious.

I had suspected that RatDog, playing for the first time in a couple of years, with an expanded roster that included such distinguished alums as saxophonist Dave Ellis, guitarist Steve Kimock and bassist Rob Wasserman, performing on Weir’s “home court,” would probably attract a much larger crowd. It did. I’d estimate that there were well over 100 people on hand, most of them actual family or friends of the musicians or TRI employees (plus Rob Wasserman’s stately standard poodle, Mingus). Bob’s wife and kids were there, as was his genteel, mustachio’d father, Jack, who sat right in front of Jeff Chimenti’s keyboard setup. Also on hand were former GD roadie Steve Parish, Garcia’s daughter Keelin and her mom Manasha Matheson, and various others from the Dead family.

Before the show, there was a lot of milling about in the corridors and in spacious Studio 2, which had been transformed into the party room for the night: It had cheery Chinese lanterns hanging from the ceiling, a couple of couches, some tables and chairs and, most important of all, beer and wine. Meanwhile, people who were actually involved in the production scurried through the crowded hallways to deal with last-minute details. Mike McGinn, who has been associated with RatDog for many years, was the main mixer; he was ensconced in the studio’s state-of-the-art control room. Justin Kreutzmann, who has been part of the TRI team from the outset, directed the webcast from the video suite.

Bob, Mark and Steve at TRI.
Photo: Bob Minkin/minkindesign.com © 2012

The show began promptly at 5 p.m. (as others have, to better accommodate East Coast viewers), evidently catching some of the late-arriving audience off-guard—at first downbeat of the short jam that wound up at “The Music Never Stopped,” the place was only about half-full. Regan and I managed to snag a couple of spots right in front on the left side, and when I say “in front,” I mean less than ten feet from Jeff’s keyboard setup, and about the same distance from the smiling, always boppin’ sax duo of Kenny Brooks and Dave Ellis, and from Bob’s microphone. There’s no stage, so we were right on their level and it really felt like being part of the band. Directly in front of us at our feet were dolly tracks for a camera which moved very slowly in front of the stage throughout the evening, while other camera operators traversed the area between us and the musicians. I couldn’t see guitarists Kimock or Mark Karan as much as I would have liked to, but I could hear them fine.

The sound in Studio One is almost supernaturally clean and clear, and not overly loud. Due to our proximity to the players, we could hear the saxophones, Jeff Chimenti’s piano and even Bob’s lead vocals off the stage, in addition to what was coming from the crystalline Meyer loudspeakers hanging from the low ceiling. We could literally feel the sound coming directly from Jeff’s swirling Leslie organ speaker, and see the reflection of his moving fingers on the shiny black front of his Yamaha grand. Bob was right at our eye level—a very interesting perspective, to say the least. It’s amazing that he can maintain his concentration singing and playing when there are cameras right in his face, but I guess he’s had a few years to get used to that. It probably helped that so many pretty women finagled spots in the front.

Because of the way I experienced the show—completely immersed in the sound and with a mostly unfettered visual connection to the players—it’s hard for me to be objective about the music. I could hear each musician better than I ever had before, and I could also hear every word Bob sang, which brought a greater depth of meaning to some of the songs I knew less well than Grateful Dead classics, such as “Even So” > “October Queen” > “The Deep End,” “Money for Gasoline,” “Two Djinn” and “Ashes and Glass.” With the exception of “Money for Gasoline” (my favorite of his post-GD output), all those songs—plus “Corrina,” which they also did a killer version of at TRI—appeared on RatDog’s underrated 2000 album, Evening Moods, and the band seemed to invest all of them with a little extra juice. These tunes are, after all, the keystones of their shared original repertoire.

For a group that hadn’t played together for two years—and in the case of Kimock, Ellis and Wasserman, even longer—they sounded amazingly together, and there’s no question they were having a ball. The ebullient Jay Lane looked so excited at times he could barely contain himself at his drum kit, and it was wonderful being so close to the Sax Bros as they traded smiles and fond glances at each other and the others all night. You could feel that everyone was in the flow, and that led to a certain effortless quality to the music, as if they’d instantly picked up where they left off. That’s ingrained telepathy in action.

Of course, with this unique configuration, the overall sound was a little different. Kimock and Mark Karan complemented each other beautifully, with Steve playing a lot of slide accents, and Mark maybe soloing a little more. I felt Steve was kind of laid-back during some of the first set, but he stepped out more in the second. Mark was on fire all night, although the sheer size of the band and the fact that they’re all incredible players meant that there weren’t too many opportunities for Mark—or anyone—to go completely crazy with solos. That said, the music didn’t feel at all restrained to me.

I wouldn’t have predicted this in advance, but I thought in some ways Kenny and Dave stole the show with their dynamic, spot-on sax parts. Whether it was the great, nearly big-band-sounding unison flourishes they added to the excellent version of “Eyes of the World,” or the way their parts diverged as “Bird Song” ascended during its big jam, they always seemed to dial in the perfect mood and feeling. I especially liked it when Dave played soprano sax on several songs (Kenny played tenor throughout)—in the hands of a master, that instrument has such a crying, human sound. Then there was their brief duel during “Stuff” (the name given to RatDog’s jazzy freeform improv—sans Bob—that traditionally comes late in the second set), where they were toe-to-toe, cheeks puffing furiously, blowing fast and hard. Yeah! Gimme some more of that!

Jeff was his usual brilliant self all night, adding just the right textures to every song, mostly on piano, as it turned out, though there were also big blasts of B-3 filling the air here and there, and one cool passage I recall where he was playing piano with his right hand and Fender Rhodes with his left. Jay confidently negotiated the myriad styles and tempos, pushing the band when they needed a little kick (like during “Cassidy,” which started out a tad slow) but also providing plenty of space for the others when things quieted down.

(L to R): Jeff, Kenny, Rob, Dave, Jay, Bob, Mark and Steve.
This was almost exactly my view (minus the wide-angle perspective).
Photo: Bob Minkin/minkindesign.com © 2012

My only regret with being so close to the band is that I could not hear Rob Wasserman very well. I have a tremendous amount of respect for him and I know he is a monster player, but from my vantage point he was behind Kenny and Dave (who were practically in my face), and even though I could see him working furiously, the sound of his stand-up bass just didn’t cut through some of the time. (Maybe his Clevinger bass would have?) There were exceptions—like when he was artfully navigating through the wide open spaces of “Bird Song”—but I would have liked to hear him more. I was also disappointed that we didn’t get to hear one of his amazing solos. (RatDog’s bass player the last several years, Robin Sylvester, was supposed to be part of the reunion, but has been dealing with some serious health issues and was unable to join them for this gig. Bob dedicated the encore—a lovely version of “Ripple”—to Robin. He was missed!)

A few favorite songs/moments from the evening: “Money for Gasoline,” which had an exciting Caribbean lilt; “Ashes and Glass,” the first-set closer, jammed out expansively; Bob’s moving acoustic take on “Peggy-O”; “Corrina,” sounding great with horn punctuation; “Bird Song”; and “Days Between,” which was haunting and emotional and built verse by verse to amazing peaks.

All in all, it was quite the love-fest onstage and in the crowd. The place was both buzzing and glowing at the end of the night. It’s scary to think how good this group could be if they actually stayed together and toured (and if Robin could join them). But that’s not going to happen anytime soon. So, for now, we must be satiated by this often magnificent and thoroughly satisfying one night stand.

Let’s do it again, boys!

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I’m writing this the morning after RatDog’s reunion show at Bob Weir’s TRI Studios complex in San Rafael, Marin County. I haven’t scoured the Internet to gauge fan reaction to the free webcast and I have no idea what it looked or sounded like out there in the real world. I want to jot down my thoughts—free of outside influences—about what it was like being in the room at TRI experiencing the show live.

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16 years 9 months
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That was way too negative.... Call it a bad night and let it go.
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17 years 5 months
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Nice read...and from out here in the world>>>if you think YOU were close to the band... YOU should have been at my house. WOW! Put a whole new meaning to riding the rail! I was hanging out with some Eskimos no less. Now next feature to add it is the audience controlled camera, special feature, additional cost. Hey build it and they they will...um yeah. Hey you never know.... I think TRI Studios is awesome and it will be the destination of any Artist looking to participate in Worldly market. "TRI is limitless", -Sherry B. It is the greatest place, unquestionable, tri me. Okay, we had a great time at my place and a better view than you. Glad you got to be there! There will still be nothing like a live experience.
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i missed the webcast, so the review is appreciated blair, and how i would've loved to be sitting there in that studio too, or maybe even more so, to have been at the opening of sweetwater in mill valley the next night. i love furthur through and through, but i do miss ratdog. I know they weren't every old head's favorite, but i had a blast at their shows for years running. being from long island, there was the beacon theater in the spring, jones beach or central park in the summer, and the FANTASTIC halloween shows at the westbury music theater (now nokia bank theatre ((i think)) here on long island - perfect little venue with a great parking lot - not something every small venue in nyc or long island has; i made sure to carve a jack-o-lantern each year to decorate my car for the halloween spirit. FURTHUR SHOULD PLAY THIS VENUE...anyone who can influence that reading this??? where phil and friends (who i also miss despite love for furthur - c'mon, the "phil-a-thons" at the nokia theatre in nyc, how good were those shows?) were more about the all out jamming, i always thought that ratdog nailed the snaky, curling, bluesy angle of the dead. after the band was solidified and touring constantly, they became a force in my mind - tight, trippy, and rockin' with 15-20 minute playin' in the bands, dark stars, and eyes of the worlds not being uncommon. i initially wished that jay lane had traveled to furthur, or if not him then john molo (that man blew my mind in phil's bands, just unbelievable), that was until joey russo changed my mind and made me feel stupid for guessing him...um, that help->slip->shakedown to open that first show at msg in nov '10 anyone??? however, if it were up to me, i would trade the backing vocalists in furthur for the sax...sorry jeff and sunshine, you guys are great, but i would love to hear how kenny brooks would have fit into furthur because he was that extra "something-something" in ratdog to me...something tells me he would've fit in like a glove... anyway, thanks again for the review blair...now it's time to start scouring the net for footage of the shows...something's gotta keep me satiated until the beacon in april - four out of eight nights, WOO-HOO!!!! going broke on my trip to hell in a bucket, but shit, at least i'm enjoying the ride!!!
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I am sorry I missed the webcast, but I just wanted to say that I have prefered Ratdog to virtually any incarnation of former GD members other than the last time I saw 7 Walkers... I just really like that Bob brings his own take on all those songs...Not what I would call an actual GD "cover band" because of that... I have paid to see Ratdog before and I would do so again...
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15 years 11 months
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Hey Weir........Thanks alot for providing us the chance to be a part of TRI Studios performances with the webcasts. Would love to see the return of Festival, The Winners and Heaven Help The Fool. They could fill that acoustic second set opener slot. Maybe they will show up on Bobby's solo tour. Many Thanks
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17 years 5 months
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I too, would like to give a huge thanx to Bobby for generously gracing the virtual world at large for this special performance. Yes, Blair, Rob's playing WAS, as always superb, although I don't recall any solos, DANG IT! But, most of the entirety of the band was in sync for most of the evening. Hugs to Jack. I think Jay might wanna do some stand-up gigs prior to the shows in the future.
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17 years 5 months
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to have Heaven Help the Fool come back...
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17 years 5 months
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I really like that idea of having Hunter do something at TRI! He could combine poetry and music, not have to worry about drunk boys shouting out songs they want to hear, and it would give us all a way to connect with him again! In fact, he could have Jim Lauderdale and his band back him for some of it (and Jim could sing some of the songs they wrote together). C'mon, Jim OWES RH for the three albums they wrote...
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what a cool idea.
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17 years 5 months
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See what you can do to make that happen! ;-)
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show for us in the UK. 1am to 4,.30am. Loved it, more than worth the wait - and I'll take Ratdog over Furthur any day. No Pigpen, no raucous in Furthur. No **peaks**. Too clean for me. Well worth the wait, and well worth the waiting up. More please, Bobby!
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you lucky blighter, blair! sounds like a fine night of music.great to see and hear Dave Ellis playing with them. he's a great player. maybe a way forward for Ratdog? twin saxophone line-up would definitely bring some extra colour to the sound. be nice to think if they do regroup then a little shake up is on the cards. i love Ratdog, always have. they just got that certain something. i understand what you mean about Mark not necessarily having much chance to solo. but i really enjoy that languid interplay of the whole ensemble; when he does fire up he just glows that bit brighter. by the way Blair, you might want to grab a listen of the CDs "Up & Down Club Sessions Vol.'s 1 & 2"; they were released on the Prawn Song label in about 1995. It features recordings by groups at the club which was in San Francisco (maybe you know it?). It was the scene that Kenny Brooks & Charlie Hunter, Dave Ellis, Jay Lane etc. were involved in. They play in quite a few different configurations. Mainly cool jazz, jazz funk, latin jazz etc. really vibrant stuff. just phenomenally glad to hear them again. let's hope Robin Sylvester returns to good health. such a shame he missed the occasion. also, that is indeed a fine suggestion re: Robert Hunter & Jim Lauderdale. would love to hear Del McCoury, Mary Gauthier & Railroad Earth there too. can you imagine the clarity of Global Drum Project or jazz in that room? oh boy...... come on 7 Walkers, your turn next!!!!!! welcome to our ears Ratdog. you've been away too long.
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Very intimate and very exciting. Really liked Corrina! Now that is how that song is supposed to be played! Thanks Ratdog and TRI
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