Phil Lesh & Friends | 05.13 & 05.14 | SF

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Words by: Ben Marks | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Phil Lesh & Friends :: 05.13.08 & 05.14.08 :: Warfield Theatre :: San Francisco, CA

Phil Lesh :: 05.13 :: The Warfield
Barely a month ago, the Grateful Dead donated its business records, correspondence, Deadhead fan mail and stage props to UC Santa Cruz. This week, Phil Lesh & Friends contributed the Grateful Dead's repertoire to the community at large by performing one album per set for five nights running at The Warfield. Or at least that's the pattern established after Tuesday's and Wednesday's opening salvos.

The crowd was psyched on Tuesday when an unhurried intro jam morphed into "The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)," a terrific choice for an opener but not necessarily a harbinger of things to come. Clearly Something was up because Bob Weir's trademark Vox amp was sitting center stage, so that legendary cat was out of the bag. Still, I wouldn't have predicted that by the end of the night I would have heard both Grateful Dead (1967) and Anthem of the Sun (1968) played back-to-back in their entirety and original album order.

The notion that something very deliberate on a music level was happening didn't really sink in until about the third song. After all, it would not be unheard of for the band to follow a tune like "Golden Road" with "Beat It On Down The Line," which gave guitarist Larry Campbell his first turn at the microphone. But, following that with "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" no doubt sent a fan or two to their cell phones to look up the song order of Grateful Dead online.

"Schoolgirl" shares an arrangement with a Jackie Greene song called "Seven Jealous Sisters," so in a weird way it was the closest thing we got to a Greene vibe all night. Though he delivered a number of sprint-like guitar solos during the first set and was a commanding presence behind the mic late in the second, Greene was pretty distracted in the middle, taking so many cigarette breaks that I started to seriously worry for the guy's health.

Bob Weir & Phil Lesh :: 05.13 :: The Warfield
No, it was not to be Greene's night. It was Bob Weir's night, who took the stage preceded by the firing of confetti and the appearance of ten '60s costumed go-go girls, four each in the round balconies on either side of the stage, two on the stage itself, possibly hired from Crazy Horse, The Warfield's proudly seedy strip club neighbor next door.

With "Cream Puff War" already in progress, Weir sang the first verse. Despite his guitar being low in the mix, he seemed to be in control, but a screw up with his vocals broke the band's momentum, and for the rest of the set the sound didn't quite coalesce. Lesh seemed mostly content to let Bobby happen, as it were, and we were occasionally rewarded for his patience. But, Weir's timing (when to begin a vocal, when to wait) sometimes seemed guided by an eccentric logic that eludes me.

The second set was a lot better, and not just because the opening notes of "Cryptical Envelopment" put an end to the evening's guessing game, once and for all (though Lesh demonstrated he's not a purist by sneaking "Nobody's Fault But Mine" in). Weir's guitar was more prominent in the house mix now, revealing rhythms and leads that were fluid and trippy, not just the discordant barks and growls behind which he sometimes seems to take refuge. "Alligator" was Lesh's turn to blow some lyrics, then Greene took control on "Caution," turning to each band member, one at a time, to ask, "Do you understand me?" The reply would be in music from Steve Molitz behind the keys, Campbell on guitar, and then, "Mr. Weir? Bobby!? Do you understand me?" For an extra beat, Weir just looked at him and one wondered if he did. Then, Weir totally brought it and my reservations finally fell away. During the introductions before the "Not Fade Away" encore, when the crowd enthusiastically gave Weir a sustained show of appreciation, it looked like they understood him, too.

Wednesdsay :: 05.14.08

Jackie Greene :: 05.14 :: The Warfield
The next night could not have been more different. If Tuesday was about everyone, band and crowd alike, getting used to the novelty of the format, Wednesday was more about the music. There was never any serious question in my mind that they would play Aoxomoxoa (1969) and Live Dead (1969) even if that would mean a repeat of "St. Stephen." The only question was who was going to play the extra pair of guitars that were front and center.

We'd have to wait until the second set to find out. The first set was a chance for the core members of this latest incarnation of Phil & Friends to show what they could do with this extraordinary album. Greene kept the evening's first performance of "St. Stephen" light by playing his parts on an acoustic guitar, which remained strapped around his neck for "Dupree's Diamond Blues," which he also sang. For "Rosemary," Campbell broke out the citern (a relative to the bouzouki), which he picked and strummed as his wife Teresa Williams sang the lyrics from one of the balconies that had been filled with go-go dancers the night before. Clad in a flowing white gown with a discreet gold crown on her head, Williams was like a fog-shrouded elvish princess sent from Middle Earth to assure The Warfield that everything would be okay when it's taken over after this run of shows by promoter AEG.

Molitz, who got less face time than the guitarists but made the most of it when he did, sang "Doin' That Rag," which included the first of three flawless a cappella performances of the night. Campbell took over on lead guitar, then switched back to citern for a wonderfully spacey "Mountains of the Moon," which also featured Greene on ethereal, haunting slide guitar. Lesh sang in a voice that remained strong and clear all night (I can't recall him sounding better), even when he got a bit lost in the lyrics. Soon we were into "China Cat Sunflower," with Greene and Campbell playing Allman Brothers-like synchronized leads that built and built until the tempo wound down for "What's Become of the Baby." I have to confess that I was sort of dreading this number but "Baby" turned out to be one of the best parts of the first set. With drummer John Molo quiet, Greene on keys, Molitz goosing his synthesizer and Campbell coaxing the sounds of mumbling planets from his pedal steel, Lesh traded vocals with Williams, again in the balcony. Lesh would sing his part, then look to the balcony for her reply, as in an opera – a charming, silly, lovely moment. "Cosmic Charlie" closed the set, complete with wonderful a cappella cartoon vocals by Lesh and Greene at the end.

Mark Karan & Phil Lesh :: 05.14 :: The Warfield
RatDog's Mark Karan joined the lineup for the second set to perform Live Dead. Was "Dark Star" 30 minutes long or 40? Who knows or really cares? Karan added galaxies of sound, playing with the authority and poise of Garcia. The piece began up-tempo and jumpy with Molitz bouncing around on the piano and Greene wailing on slide. At times, Karan and Campbell would join forces to tag-team the riffs, then there'd be space, then crescendos, then more space, so that by the time Lesh was easing into the second verse, you couldn't quite figure out how the band had even gotten back to it. This was the clear high point of the evening: Greene tore it up, then Campbell would do the same, right behind him with Karan hot on his tail.

By the time "St. Stephen" came around for his second appearance of the night, the band and crowd were one. In particular, Molitz and Karan appeared to be having a ball. Skipping "William Tell," the band charged straight into "The Eleven," sung by Molitz. Greene began the vocals on "Lovelight" but the torch was quickly passed to Karan, who I think impressed a lot of folks with the force of his growling, Pigpen-quoting vocals. It was back to Greene for "Death Don't Have No Mercy," a song that seemed written for Campbell's back alley Stratocaster moans. More angelic harmonies followed when Campbell, Karan, Lesh and Greene sang "And We Bid You Goodnight." Then, after a mix up with the house lights, Greene sang the little performed Pigpen number "King Bee" for the encore.

What's on tap for tonight (Friday 5/16)? An educated guess says Workingman's Dead (1970) followed by American Beauty (1970) with perhaps special guests David Nelson on guitar and David Grisman on mandolin since each played on these albums, notably Nelson's lead guitar on "Box of Rain." Saturday and Sunday? That's a tougher call since there are so many possibilities; maybe Wake of the Flood (1973) and Mars Hotel (1974) on Saturday (if I ran the zoo, I'd ask Barry Sless to sit in on that night). And all bets are off for Sunday's likely epic finale. Whatever happens, it's every bit the gift, and then some, as the UC Santa Cruz archives.

05.13.08 :: Warfield Theatre :: San Francisco, CA
Set I Grateful Dead (First Album, 1967): The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion), Beat It On Down The Line, Good Morning Little School Girl, Cold Rain & Snow, Sitting On Top Of The World, *$Cream Puff War, *Morning Dew, *New Minglewood Blues, *Viola Lee Blues
Set II with Bob Weir Anthem of the Sun (1968): That's It For The Other One, I. Cryptical Envelopement, II. Quodlibet For Tender Feet III. The Faster We Go The Rounder We Get, IV. We Leave The Castle, Nobody's Fault But Mine, New Potato Caboose, Born Cross-Eyed, Alligator, Caution (Do Not Step On Tracks)
E: $Not Fade Away
*with Bob Weir, $with Dancers

05.14.08 :: Warfield Theatre :: San Francisco, CA
Set I Aoxomoxoa (Third Album, 1969): St. Stephen > Dupree's Diamond Blues, *Rosemary, Doin' That Rag, Mountains Of The Moon, China Cat Sunflower, *What's Become Of The Baby, Cosmic Charlie
Set II with Mark Karan Live/Dead (1969): Dark Star > St. Stephen > The Eleven > Turn On Your Lovelight > Death Don't Have No Mercy > And We Bid You Goodnight
E: King Bee
*with Teresa Williams on vocals

Continue reading for more images of Phil & Friends at The Warfield...

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Tuesday :: 05.13.08 :: Warfield Theatre :: San Francisco, CA

Wednesday :: 05.14.08 :: Warfield Theatre :: San Francisco, CA

Stay tuned for more coverage of Phil Lesh & Friends at The Warfield...

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Comments

treetophigh Fri 5/16/2008 11:19AM
+3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

treetophigh

WOW

WSPilgrim Fri 5/16/2008 11:31AM
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wow is right

Terrapin! Fri 5/16/2008 11:35AM
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Terrapin!

WOW. What I would give to see/hear these guys play Workingman's Dead and American Beauty live. The amount of talent on that state is straight up massive.

Terrapin! Fri 5/16/2008 11:35AM
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Terrapin!

^ on that stage*

Deadphishbiscuits Fri 5/16/2008 11:45AM
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Deadphishbiscuits

Good Lord Have MErcy!!! looks Incredible!!! hopefully a sign to come with bob and phil playing together again!

jjwood starstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 11:47AM
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Nice review! One note: Teresa Williams is Larry Campbell's wife.

aquariumdrunk starstarstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 12:06PM
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aquariumdrunk

Great, great pictures! Thanks!

jerryskid315 Fri 5/16/2008 01:45PM
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jerryskid315

I wanna go... I wanna go...

That band sounds amazing and with Karan too it had to be smokin'!!!

rider11 starstarstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 02:17PM
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What a classy way to close out such a historic venue. Phil you are the man

DevinKlein starstarstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 02:43PM
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I will sell all my worldly possessions to someone in exchange for tickets to the next three shows and plane ticket to Frisco. Someone make me an offer stat!

PoRNoFUnK starstarstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 03:08PM
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PoRNoFUnK

the picture with bob and phil hugging eachother is priceless....i'd love too see that as a poster... aged beauty

Window Fri 5/16/2008 05:01PM
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^ The hugs after each set drew the loudest applause from the crowd (I was at Wednesday's show.) It was great to see and feel.

Axilla15 starstarstarstarstar Fri 5/16/2008 11:38PM
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Wish I was there so bad!!! Great review and great pics. Thanks!

jackiesoup Sat 5/17/2008 07:45AM
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Now THAT is something else. Nice pics and review. It's so great to see Phil & Bobby together and I can't wait to hear the tapes. I need to win a lottery so I can travel to these shows.

21mmer starstarstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 08:45AM
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21mmer

gotta love it. phil is in full stride. too bad they didn't play william tell. i've always enjoyed that part of the st. steve>the 11 seque.

dsawthestone starstarstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 10:02AM
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dsawthestone

wow, looks amazing. i really hope we get a review of the next 3 nights!

briank67 Sat 5/17/2008 10:45AM
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briank67

another WOW. wish i was in san fran right now... nice write-up too!!

nuke_ticketbastard starstarstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 11:48AM
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yes , wow.... :-)

Jambandfreak1 starstarstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 02:27PM
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Jambandfreak1

Damn! Damn that sounded like a great show!! I was in awe just reading it.

Jambandfreak1 starstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 02:30PM
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Jambandfreak1

Ill get mine in June cause Weirs coming to town to jam with Ratdog.

daveapaug starstarstarstarstar Sat 5/17/2008 04:45PM
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daveapaug

Wow, this has been up for 24 hours++ and it hasnt deteriorated into a "that show would have been sweeter if trey was there" thread. Trust me, I thank you all for keeping your trey and sector 9 comments to articles that are about them. Whatever, I went on Tuesday and the Vibe was sick. Bobby received a louder ovation than anyone else on stage. Friday was Workingmans dead and American Beauty with Mark Karan. Closing the book on the name Warfield in style. The first two nites are up on the archive, thank you very much. Whats in store for the last two nites????

c00lmike Sun 5/18/2008 02:09AM
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c00lmike

I hate everyone who lives in/near San Francisco right now (And I guess for the last 40 years while were at it)

brooklynite84 Sun 5/18/2008 05:47PM
Show -3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!
daveapaug starstarstarstarstar Sun 5/18/2008 06:10PM
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daveapaug

^^ Yes you are. However, I think I am not the only one that thinks you are a tool. I think Herring has a better gig right now. I also think Warren would probably rather play the great songs that HE wrote, with HIS band. You can continue to see DSO (cover band) all you want. I will continue to feel blessed to actually be able to see Phil perform live music. And if you're keeping score at home, like I know you are, Thats 48 hours for the first "the other guitar player is better" comments.

freekfreely starstarstarstarstar Sun 5/18/2008 09:55PM
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^^ You are a fool Phil has whipped this band into shape and they sound like fire right now. This looks so good . Yeah for Phil.

jeffy8 starstarstarstarstar Sun 5/18/2008 10:38PM
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THIS TREND SHOULD CONTINUE, I'D LOKE TO BE AT THE SHAKEDOWN STREET AND/OR

IN THE DARK SHOWS!

ALOfreak starstarstarstarstar Mon 5/19/2008 04:22AM
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ALOfreak

And I thought first night only tickets would be the worst of the five. Not! Bobby sitting in for most of the show. First set highlights Cold Rain & Snow and Bob's three shots of whiskey during New Minglewood Blues. Second set highlights were Crypitical Envelopement>The Other One>Nobody's Fault But Mine>The Other One>Crypitical Reprise and the encore Not Fade Away being sang by the crowd for 30 seconds until the band ended it. Long standing ovation for Bobby was great. Phil & Bobby hugging was a special moment. Only bummer was I went out the back door and didn't get a free poster. Bill Kreutzmann sitting in with ALO after midnight new years night>Phil's Mardi Gra party in January>Mickey, Bobby & Phil Reunion for Deadheads for Obama in Febuary>Bobby & Mickey @ Green Apple SF in April>Bobby joining Phil & Friends for final Bill Graham Warfield run in May. It's been a good year already for this old head!

M.I.L.E.S starstarstarstarstar Mon 5/19/2008 09:24AM
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M.I.L.E.S

this is so bad ass>>>>>>>>>>et II with Mark Karan Live/Dead (1969): Dark Star > St. Stephen > The Eleven > Turn On Your Lovelight > Death Don't Have No Mercy > And We Bid You Goodnight

E: King Bee

barstoolz1 Mon 5/19/2008 11:58AM
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barstoolz1

Holy Smokes! That's frickin HOT!! Miss you Jerry

blower starstarstarstarstar Mon 5/19/2008 03:13PM
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Somebody post last nights set list. I'm dying here. Phil is the man!

lexslamman starstarstarstarstar Mon 5/19/2008 04:41PM
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From the Philzone folks:

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Warfield Theater,

San Francisco, California

Prior to 1st Set: Phil comes out and says “It’s going to be a long night, so settle in and get comfortable.” He then says there will be a lot of special guests and special music and they are not really sure what they are going to play, “just like the old days.”

1st Set (78 Minutes 9:17pm – 10:35pm)

Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, & John Molo

Come Together > (BW)

Dark Star > (Phil sang 1st verse, Bob sang 2nd verse)

Loose Lucy (BW)

West L.A. Fadeaway * (BW)

The Wheel > *

Not Fade Away *

* with Jeff Chimenti from Ratdog and Larry Campbell

Phil introduces Jeff Chimenti and Bob Weir, calling Bob “my prodigal brother.” Phil then says “Bob & John have been wanting to do that for a long time and I am glad you got to see it.”

2nd Set (29 Minutes 10:44pm – 11:13pm)

Acoustic Set w/Larry Campbell & Jackie Green

? Maureen ?

Sing Me Back Home

Deep Elem Blues (LC on lead vocals)

? Instrumental ?

The Warfield Waltz (as introduced by LC)

Love Please Come Home

Goodnight Irene

3rd Set (90 Minutes 11:40pm – 1:10am)

Phil Lesh & Friends

Shakedown Street >

Like a Ball & Chain

Big River (LC on lead vocals)

Mississippi Half-Step * >

Althea *

Mexican Girl *

Stella Blue (Instrumental) * >

Sugaree *

* with Mark Karan from Ratdog

4th Set (15 Minutes 1:15am – 1:30am)

"Skinny Singers" Jackie Green & Tim Bluhm

The Ballad of Spider John

Where The Rain Don’t Go

? Squeeky Wheel ? *

* with Nicki Bluhm on backing vocals

5th Set (90 Minutes 1:55am – 3:25am)

Phil Lesh & Friends

(Balloons drop from the ceiling)

Sugar Magnolia

Unbroken Chain >

Mountains of the Moon >

Inspiration >

I Know You Rider

Donor Rap, Band Intros

E: Jam > *

Truckin' > *

And We Bid You Goodnight *

* with Mark Karan from Ratdog

lexslamman Mon 5/19/2008 04:50PM
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Here's Fridays Mindfuck, courtesy of Philzone:

Warfield Theater, SF, CA

May 17, 2008

Set 1 Skull $ Roses:

Bertha, Mama Tried

Big Railroad Blues

Playing In The Band

The Other One

Me & My Uncle

Big Boss Man

Me & Bobby McGee

Johnny B. Goode

Wharf Rat

Not Fade Away>

Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad

Set 2 Dead Set:

Samson and Delilah

Friend Of The Devil

New Minglewood Blues

Deal, Candyman

Little Red Rooster

Loser, Passenger

Feel Like A Stranger

Franklin's Tower

Set 3 with Henry Kaiser on guitar:

Donor Rap, *Rhythm Devils

*Fire On The Mountain

Greatest Story Ever Told

Brokedown Palace, Band Intros

*with Sikiru Adepoju on talking drum,

started as a duet with Molo then eventually became the full band

lexslamman starstarstarstarstar Mon 5/19/2008 04:54PM
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And just so you all know that Phil Lesh means business, here's what went down on Thursday:

Set 1:

Workingman's Dead

Uncle John's Band (JG, all)

*High Time (DN)

*Dire Wolf (JG)

*New Speedway Boogie (JG)

*Cumberland Blues (all)

*Black Peter (PL)

*Easy Wind (JG, DN)

Casey Jones (JG)

Sickness?

Oh yeah, you better believe it.

lexslamman Mon 5/19/2008 04:55PM
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Here's the second set and the guests from Thursday:

Set 2:

American Beauty

*Box of Rain (PL)

*#Friend Of The Devil (DN)

Sugar Magnolia (JG)

Operator (PL)

Candyman (JG)

*%Ripple (DN)

$Brokedown Palace (JG)

+Til the Morning Comes (TW)

Phil Discusses Album Concept>

Donor Rap / Band Intros

E: +@Attics Of My Life (TW, PL, LC)

*Truckin' (JG, all)

*w/ David Nelson, +w/ Teresa Williams

blower starstarstarstarstar Tue 5/20/2008 02:21PM
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Thanks Lex. I was not getting updates on Philzone. What a run! Glad I made it to at least one night. 5 sets Holy crap!

Jambandfreak1 starstarstarstarstar Wed 5/28/2008 09:30PM
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Jambandfreak1

Well Ive always felt like the Dead was a sum of its parts. If someone asked me about Seinfeld I would say the same thing too. If I go see Phil show i really do enjoy but its not quite the same without the rest of the guys. Its the same way with Ratdog. I really do enjoy all of it though.

Jerry the man is always there in spirit and I always feel that whether I go see Bobby and/or Phil.

When I went to the last 2 of 3 shows during the 'Wave that flag' tour in 2004. They broke into L.L. Rain as the rain began (Idaho Center 7/3/4) to come down on the crowd. The timing was perfect!! I then went to the Gorge (7/5/80 for the last show on the west coast and then after Robert Hunter finished speaking they opened with Shakedown St and that was just icing on the cake for me. I have yet to go to two shows in a row that were as perfect as both of those.