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Live at Keystone, Vol. 1
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Live at Keystone, Vol. 1
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Live at Keystone, Vol. 1
Current price: $12.99
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Size: OS
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This 1973 release features what is essentially a Bay Area
bar band
led by
Merl Saunders
(keyboards) and
Jerry Garcia
(guitar) during the latter musician's downtime from
the Grateful Dead
. Along with the two subsequent "encore" volumes,
Live at Keystone
includes performances drawn from the quartet's July 10-11, 1973, run in the intimate confines of
Keystone Korners
in Berkeley. With the support of
Bill Vitt
(percussion) and
John Kahn
(bass), the pair jams their way through an eclectic assortment of covers and a few equally inspired original
instrumentals
. The clavinet and Hammond B-3-driven
"Keepers"
(aka
"Finders Keepers"
) is one such composition from the team of
Saunders
and
Kahn
. This funky rocker pulsates through some downright greasy interactions that recall a cross between
Sly Stone
Billy Preston
. Their interpretation of
"Positively 4th Street"
-- the first of two
Bob Dylan
covers -- is laid-back and bluesy, which allows
Garcia
to stretch out instrumentally between the verses. His impassioned vocals weave between
' alternating murky and billowing organ fills, adding new depths of empathetic noir. Notably,
David Grisman
's mandolin runs were not part of the live recording, but overdubbed later. Conversely,
Jimmy Cliff
's
"The Harder They Come"
bops with an infectiously syncopated shuffle that glides along
' ethereal, swirling keyboard accents mimicking the hurdy-gurdy of a calliope.
"It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry"
is given a languid and slinky workout that is highlighted by some of
's most incendiary fretwork in this collection. Joined in progress is
"Space"
-- a bit of jazzy free-form which was initially preceded by
"Someday Baby"
during the July 10 performance.
truly shines as he barrels in between
' scatological leads and
's trippy guitar runs. This distinct ensemble
improvisation
recalls some of
's further-out sonic explorations during seminal mid-'70s performances of
"Playing in the Band"
"Eyes of the World."
It likewise foreshadows the direction that
the Dead
would follow on their highly sophisticated and
fusion
-influenced
Blues for Allah
(1975). The 1988 CD includes the previously unissued
"Merle's Tune"
from the July 11 show. This extended
instrumental
features a more aggressive side of the band, who churns through the changes in a hybrid of
R&B
jazz
. Again,
feed off of each other as they bandy solos and trade
funk
-filled licks. ~ Lindsay Planer
bar band
led by
Merl Saunders
(keyboards) and
Jerry Garcia
(guitar) during the latter musician's downtime from
the Grateful Dead
. Along with the two subsequent "encore" volumes,
Live at Keystone
includes performances drawn from the quartet's July 10-11, 1973, run in the intimate confines of
Keystone Korners
in Berkeley. With the support of
Bill Vitt
(percussion) and
John Kahn
(bass), the pair jams their way through an eclectic assortment of covers and a few equally inspired original
instrumentals
. The clavinet and Hammond B-3-driven
"Keepers"
(aka
"Finders Keepers"
) is one such composition from the team of
Saunders
and
Kahn
. This funky rocker pulsates through some downright greasy interactions that recall a cross between
Sly Stone
Billy Preston
. Their interpretation of
"Positively 4th Street"
-- the first of two
Bob Dylan
covers -- is laid-back and bluesy, which allows
Garcia
to stretch out instrumentally between the verses. His impassioned vocals weave between
' alternating murky and billowing organ fills, adding new depths of empathetic noir. Notably,
David Grisman
's mandolin runs were not part of the live recording, but overdubbed later. Conversely,
Jimmy Cliff
's
"The Harder They Come"
bops with an infectiously syncopated shuffle that glides along
' ethereal, swirling keyboard accents mimicking the hurdy-gurdy of a calliope.
"It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry"
is given a languid and slinky workout that is highlighted by some of
's most incendiary fretwork in this collection. Joined in progress is
"Space"
-- a bit of jazzy free-form which was initially preceded by
"Someday Baby"
during the July 10 performance.
truly shines as he barrels in between
' scatological leads and
's trippy guitar runs. This distinct ensemble
improvisation
recalls some of
's further-out sonic explorations during seminal mid-'70s performances of
"Playing in the Band"
"Eyes of the World."
It likewise foreshadows the direction that
the Dead
would follow on their highly sophisticated and
fusion
-influenced
Blues for Allah
(1975). The 1988 CD includes the previously unissued
"Merle's Tune"
from the July 11 show. This extended
instrumental
features a more aggressive side of the band, who churns through the changes in a hybrid of
R&B
jazz
. Again,
feed off of each other as they bandy solos and trade
funk
-filled licks. ~ Lindsay Planer