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Rolling With The Dead: Legends Rock Three Back-to-Back Shows in New York

3/31/09, 10:15 am EST

Photo: Bedder/Getty

“It’s just like playing a three-hour show,” said the Dead’s Bob Weir, backstage at New York’s Angel Orensanz theater, “but it’s broken up by cab rides.” Weir wasn’t joking. To unofficially kick off their spring reunion tour, the Dead had grand plans to play a free concert in a large outdoor venue in New York City, possibly Battery Park. When both the weather and city paperwork scotched that idea, the band did the next best thing. On March 30th, the Dead played three free, back-to-back shows in the city like Prince did in L.A. Saturday night; the roughly 4,100 free tickets were distributed to fans by Internet lottery. (Check out photos of all three gigs.)

And what a long, intermittently strange day it was, beginning with Weir, bassist Phil Lesh and touring guitarist Warren Haynes playing “Friend of the Devil” on The View. (The band is longtime friends with co-host Whoopi Goldberg.) At 5 p.m. the men did a rare acoustic-trio set at the intimate Angel Orensanz, a former synagogue on the Lower East Side. The show focused on American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead classics like “Dire Wolf,” “Cumberland Blues” and “Casey Jones,” but the highlight was a largely instrumental, 20-minute version of “Bird Song,” the three men weaving guitar lines in and around each other.

At 8 p.m., Lesh, Weir and Haynes were joined by drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti at the Gramercy Theatre, where the full band played an hour of nonstop electric music. Nearly half the set was taken up by an introductory jam and “Playing in the Band,” followed by beefy renditions of “Good Lovin,’” “The Wheel” and “Franklin’s Tower” that revealed how tight the reformed band has become after lengthy rehearsals in February. (Dropped from the set list due to the one-hour time limit were planned versions of “Viola Lee Blues” and “Built to Last.”)

At 11 p.m., the day of the living Dead wound up at the largest of the three venues, the 3,000-capacity Roseland. Still in electric mode, the Dead awed an enraptured, dancing crowd with nearly two more hours of music, starting with “Althea” (on which Haynes sang Garcia’s parts, as he often did), followed by “Cassidy,” “Eyes of the World” and a typically improvisational “St. Stephen.” The set ended with a celebratory, guitar-jammy “Sugar Magnolia,” Haynes throwing in Chuck Berry riffs. “This band is interesting,” said Hart afterward, slipping into Forest Gump voice. “It’s like a box of chocolate: You never know what you’re gonna get.”

The shows served as a warm-up for the Dead’s full tour, which starts April 12th in Greensboro, North Carolina, and continues through mid-May. (The band has worked up nearly 100 songs, including rarely performed oddities like “King’s Solomon’s Marbles.”) What did the band think of the music they made on their Manhattan “cab tour”? “It still needs some work,” Weir said after the Roseland set. “We have to stratify our parts more. But hope is on the horizon.”

For much more from the Dead’s triple-gig marathon in New York, keep your eyes peeled for a full story in an upcoming issue of Rolling Stone.

Related Stories:

Still Truckin’: The Dead Reunite in Pennsylvania
Backstage at the Rock & Roll Inauguration: The Dead’s Phil Lesh on Obama Gig
Grateful Dead Roadie: “I Took My Job as a Sacred Task”


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Comments

Weak | 3/31/2009, 11:16 am EST

Phish invented The Dead, let’s face facts.

FOTD | 3/31/2009, 11:38 am EST

That performance on The View was so awful that it was like having my memories of the Dead stomped on.

Anonymous | 3/31/2009, 11:56 am EST

“We have to stratify our parts more.”

What the fuck does that mean?

Please retire, Bobby!!

JIMMY FROM DREXEL HILL | 3/31/2009, 12:12 pm EST

PHISH PHBLOW

Al-Anon | 3/31/2009, 1:11 pm EST

100 songs? The Dead’s entire songbook is 90 songs.

90 songs/45yrs = 2 songs a year

Prolific fer shure!!

JERRY WHO | 3/31/2009, 2:32 pm EST

THE DEAD sound better than ever!

JERRY WHO ?

Z | 3/31/2009, 3:20 pm EST

I am glad to see they are rocking it again. Wont be able to see any shows. I wish them the best of luck…

CR1ZZ | 3/31/2009, 3:29 pm EST

Jerry Garcia was a legend. But I don not think his death should’nt stop this band from performing.

Jerry Garcia R.I.P- 1995

Mango | 3/31/2009, 3:33 pm EST

“100 songs? The Dead’s entire songbook is 90 songs.

90 songs/45yrs = 2 songs a year

Prolific fer shure!!”

Wow..thanks for the ignorance. You obviously no nothing about the GD or their HUGE songbook

Love this band | 3/31/2009, 3:43 pm EST

In my opinion the grateful dead are hands down the greatest american rock band ever. And good for the core four to get out there and celebrate that memory one more time this summer. woohooooo!

Whoever said JERRY WHO | 3/31/2009, 3:47 pm EST

is a disrespectful youngster idiot.

Papaya | 3/31/2009, 4:38 pm EST

Mango,

Being a fan, I am in the know.
Do the math and subtract the covers.

Love,
Papaya

VACLAVMN | 3/31/2009, 5:09 pm EST

Being a huge phan I’m glad to see them back. Let’s eat

halloweenhead!!!!!!!! | 3/31/2009, 6:15 pm EST

the cardinals fucking kick ass they are better live than the dead and it shows in live shows!!!all deadheads go back to sleep!!!!warren hayes in the band is comical!

Mark | 3/31/2009, 10:23 pm EST

I bet these old bastards can still get some young hot girls!

marksg | 3/31/2009, 11:23 pm EST

mango knows nothing. The Deads songbook is more like 300 songs. Warren was awesome. The Dead were awesome. Great times had by all. BTW it was the “Taxi Tour” not Cab Tour, RS get the facts straight!

HOLE | 4/1/2009, 12:07 am EST

halloweenhead!!!!!!!!

Dude… you are a fuckin idiot. This is not a time test. this is a taste test. So go back to your pro tools bands and listen to the clarity that the dead envoke. The Dead are about emotion, scarring and playing music. It takes years to achieve the wormhole they create every night so fuk off and branch out.

HOLE | 4/1/2009, 12:09 am EST

You just don’t get it

NYsteve | 4/2/2009, 6:03 am EST

Jeez guys, relax LOL! The Dead shows were fantastic and they ARE the Greatest American Rock Band….mistakes and all….we take it as they give it with pure emotion and feeling. To the above listed posts take a line from Uncle John’s Band “ain’t no time to hate, barely time to wait!” I am proud of their accomplishments and am glad to have been a part of the best ‘experiment’ for the last 37 years of my life. Thank You Bobby, Phil, Billy, Mickey, Jeff & Warren “for a real good time!”

zzzzzzz....... | 4/2/2009, 8:36 am EST

YAWN!!!

Noobs | 4/2/2009, 11:49 am EST

How can all of you desrespect the greatest rock & roll band of all time. The Grateful Dead are heroes to many people, including myself. I know Jerry is gone, but why can’t they still get together in rememberance…and have a damned good time. So please, you people that say the GD only has 100 songs, and that Phish created the GD..please do not show up at the shows. So I can have a bigger space to dance in.

Pulp79 | 4/2/2009, 12:49 pm EST

From 1965-1995, the Dead have written and performed over 300 songs, with Hunter/Garcia songs taking up 2/3 of those. So you’re not a fan of the Dead, obviously.

Jack | 4/2/2009, 12:53 pm EST

Someone needs to go to archive.org and listen to the 2,000 soundboard shows there, then tell me the Dead wrote 90-freking songs. They wrote 90 songs before ‘74!

Pulp79 | 4/2/2009, 1:23 pm EST

Here’s a list of their originals that have been officially released. There’s 130 more, mostly Hunter/Garcia songs, that haven’t made it on an album.

And yes they did a couple hundred covers too, and made them their own. No one can ever tell me that Jack-A-Roe, I Know You Rider, or Goin’ Down the Road Feelin’ Bad ain’t Dead songs.

Jeff Starship | 4/2/2009, 3:12 pm EST

The Starship is touring this Summer and have a raft of new material. As far as The Dead go: ‘you can’t cover a cover band’. The Allman Bros have the same problem.

The world of rock music has plenty of rehash, in fact too much.

karl hungus | 4/2/2009, 6:56 pm EST

The grateful Dead were awesome, original, and innovators. The Dead, however, suck ass. I’m sorry but the Dead is not the same as the Grateful dead. It just does not sound good or innovative to my ears….and i saw the grateful dead over 100 times starting in 1972. It’s great that they did some free shows, but let’s be honest- the magic just isn’t there anymore. If you eat enough acid then even a guy farting into a microphine would sound good. I love warren, but he does not gel with this band. It’s sad that deadheads will eat this crap up like it was a tofu burrito, but that’s just life i guess.

brian | 4/2/2009, 9:19 pm EST

lot of angry old hippies on this thread. greatest american rock band? seriously? i’ve found that a lot of hippies agree. however, i’ve also found a lot of hippies to be stubborn, belligerent, and unable to look at things objectively so…

and robert | 4/2/2009, 9:45 pm EST

the grateful dead had a certain chemistry because they played together and were on the road together for nearly 25 years non stop. The thing about the “dead” is that between 1995 and 2009 that tight chemistry was lost. When these guys splintered off and formed ratdog, phil and friends, planet drum, and billy’s side bands they stopped focusing on that core energy. Ever since jerry died there has been a huge gaping sonic hole in their sound that they have tried to fill with every guitar player/style under the sun. There is no replacing jerry garcia and what he brought to the core unit. To hear warren give his best “jerry-esque” licks isn’t even close, and i love warren. Something is missing and it is more evident than ever now. I’m not a jaded old hippy, but after this tour they should put this to bed. I’m sure there will be some moments of clarity throughout the tour, and the drums always kick ass, but the music this band makes now as a unit sounds clunky and directionless. I do give them props for still being able to stand onstage and perform.

muffin | 4/3/2009, 12:21 am EST

the shows were great, as were the deadheads for obama!
thanks guys for more great music and looking forward to spring tour AND rothbury!!
the dead, outdoors, summer, at a fest with willie nelson, black crowes, and dylan (and many other amazinf bands!) is going to be great!

speezo | 4/3/2009, 2:59 am EST

but was there acid? I bought a ticket for the acid mainly, so there better be acid

dead's own wordz | 4/3/2009, 10:45 am EST

the band should heed their own lyrics.

..please don’t dominate the rap Jack if got nothin NEW to say…

Bud | 4/3/2009, 12:23 pm EST

It’s still fun.

If you don’t think so, stay home!

The music never stops.

Jack Tripper | 4/3/2009, 3:23 pm EST

Hey Jeff Starship, you’re hilarious. To even compare the Starship to the Grateful Dead is laughable. The Airplane, maybe comes a little closer. Oh, and the Dead have more originals than Airplane and Starship combined. Look it up.

ls 420 | 4/4/2009, 11:20 am EST

Wow didn’t think some old friends havin fun for the benefit of others would raise so much emotion. I know it ain’t the Grateful Dead and it never will be, but let’s let them have there fun. Me I am going to have fun with them.

Katie Mae | 4/5/2009, 2:41 am EST

Man.. I never had a chance to the the “grateful dead” due to my age. Hell… Ive never seen the “dead”. I understand that its not like it usta be.. is there anything in history that has stayed the same? No way! history is happening.. the good feelings dont die.. I feel something, even after the drugs are long gone.

I guess all that matters is if you are enjoying the ride. I am..

I cant wait to get there.. for a rose is just as sweet.. even if you call it the dead

Joe Puma | 4/5/2009, 1:21 pm EST

Does anyone know if they plan on coming to play in Texas?I saw the Grateful Dead jam at Madison Square Garden in March of ‘81 and they were on that night.Even without Jerry,it would be cool to see the rest of the band.Here’s hoping Houston makes it to their tour list this year.

Anonymous | 4/13/2009, 11:20 am EST

Wow everyone neesd to relax man. No one is trying to recreate jerry. Just go to the shows and enjoy the music. If you’re not into it then stay home. Be thankful there still playin for those who want to listen. Relax people its only music.

Anonymous | 4/13/2009, 11:20 am EST

Wow everyone needs to relax man. No one is trying to recreate jerry. Just go to the shows and enjoy the music. If you’re not into it then stay home. Be thankful there still playin for those who want to listen. Relax people its only music.

Boogie | 4/30/2009, 5:09 pm EST

Weak,

You are a complete moron aren’t you!!

grateful | 5/16/2009, 7:32 pm EST

The Dead is a great time, and tons of fun. No need to compare them to the Grateful Dead, since it is the base in which The Dead stands on.

Have fun

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