This date in Dead history gives us quality
shows from 1968 and 1977, but as on October 9, shows from the early ’80s
dominate the action. After concluding a memorable night in Worcester on
10-9-84, the band’s next destination was Maine for a pair of shows in the
Augusta Civic Center. I was on hand for both gigs. On 10-12-84, the second set
ended with a powerhouse combination: Playin’ in the Band > Uncle John’s Band
> Morning Dew. The momentous sweep of that finale made an indelible
impression on my mind and overshadowed the rest of the show. When I listened to
the soundboard recording for this endeavor, the remainder of the show was a
pleasant surprise, and better than I remember.
You
know it’s gonna get stranger so let’s get on with show. The “Feel like a Stranger” opener has a
lengthy jam as Garcia’s guitar licks fly and multiply. The adventure continues
with a moving performance of “It Must Have Been the Roses” in the second spot,
and the first “On the Road Again” in two years. It’s a performance that once
again indicates the band’s feeling creative, and it’s also the last time the
Dead played “On the Road Again. While they’re at it, they decide to play their
first “Jack-A-Roe” in more than two years. Garcia digs in for two perky yet
concise solos. Solid presentations of “It’s All Over Now” and the always
desirable “Cumberland Blues” set the stage for a “Music Never Stopped” closer.
I was a little ill on
the night of 10-12-84, and I don’t recall “The Music Never Stopped” being all
that hot. I was wrong. Garcia digs in and puts a consistent charge into the
building jam and the finale. When the band seems like they’re about to wind
things down, Garcia vetoes the premature ending and gives the jam a
satisfactory send-off. This is one of the best “Musics” between the years ’83
and ’86. If I were to compile a list of the ten greatest versions, two would
come from 1987, and the rest between the years ’77 and ’82. I was pleasantly
surprised by Jerry’s wizardry during the Augusta “Music.”
“Cold Rain and Snow”
and Lost Sailor > Saint of Circumstance provide an enticing start to set
two. The next revelation of listening to this show was Brent’s performance of
“Don’t Need Love” in the fourth spot. It’s an original written by Brent that
was played a handful of times between ’84 and ’86. I was disappointed by this
selection in the moment. After revisiting the tapes, I couldn’t get “Don’t Need
Love” out of my mind. The tune has a haunting, hypnotic groove, and it features
some heartfelt, bluesy singing by Brent. It’s a nice mood piece that could have
become a substantial song if some lyrics were added or if the band took time to
work on it. Following Brent’s blues, it sounds like “Playin’” is next, but
Jerry squashes that notion with the opening riff of “Uncle John’s Band,” and
this is where the fun begins.
There’s a grainy
video of this show available on YouTube. The bootlegger is filming from an
elevated position on the opposite side of Jerry. It’s similar to the view I had
that night from where I was standing. I enjoy the authentic feel of bootleg
videos like this. Jerry’s dressed in black t-shirt and jeans, and his long,
frizzy, gray mane makes him look like a grizzly guitar god as he stands like a
mountain and wails away. He may have been in abysmal health and stoned on
Persian, but the virtuosity of his playing is breathtaking. He’s not smiling or
gesturing as he applies all his focus and energy in these two “UJB” solos. It’s
an incredible onslaught of lead guitar that heads into another substantial jam
before Drums.
Coming out of Space,
the noodling sounds like a return to “Playin’ in the Band,” even though the
song hadn’t been started. The theme swirls around in preparation for the
blastoff into what will be the first standalone “Playin’” reprise. The band pounds
an authoritative charge to the final chorus . . . or the
opening verse, on this occasion. Jerry and Bobby tee off as “Playin’” rampages
to its next destination, an “Uncle John’s” reprise. Temperatures rise in the
Augusta Civic Center as the music surges to the great sing-and-clap-along:
“Whoa oh what I want to know oh oh, is how does the song go?” The place is
electrified, and as everybody’s singing “Come hear Uncle John’s Band” I’m
thinking, Here comes “The Dew!”
“Morning Dew” was inevitable and unprecedented
in this sequencing. Uncle John’s > Dew had happened before in ’73 and ’74 in
the center of a few “Playin’” loops. Those were crafted masterpieces. Augusta
was the ultimate in on-the-fly improvisational execution. The rush of the
Playin’ > Uncle John’s reprises dramatically frames the moment. This would
be the only “Dew” of the tour, and Garcia sang it powerfully and with deep
emotion, overcoming any vocal limitations brought on by decades of smoking.
Phil rattles the Augusta Civic Center repeatedly, opening up the pathway for a
rousing between-verse instrumental.
The final journey commences with sweet and
sour Jerry—thick, juicy notes. The band has control of the tempo as Jerry
shifts the creative flow. As the jam accelerates, there’s a series of high-frequency
guitar leads that are searing and soothing at the same time. The crowd’s
roaring in steady waves, and Phil’s bombs set the pace like a timekeeper
ringing a bell. Garcia’s playing has legs as the band rises through the
crescendo. Garcia sighs, “I guess it doesn’t matter anyway,” and as they did in
Cornell on 5-8-77, they lay their instruments down. “The Dew” said it all.
The only thing missing from the Augusta “Dew”
was a final chord-fanning blitzkrieg, but this was the best one in a year that featured
several prodigious versions. All three “Dews” from the spring tour were
monsters: 4-14-84 Hampton, 4-20-84 Philadelphia, and 4-26-84 Providence. The
Providence “Dew” has one of the greatest jams you’ll ever hear, but Garcia’s
voice struggles all the way to that point. As people discuss Dead shows,
there’s a tendency for some to diss early ’80s shows because of Jerry’s Persian
addiction. There was a downward turn in the Dead’s consistency during these
years, but when they were on, like they were in Augusta, they could ascend to
lofty heights.
A year earlier, the Dead thrilled their rabid
New York City fanbase with a breakout performance of “St. Stephen” on 10-11-83,
the first time they played it in four years. How could they possibly match the
excitement they created the night before when the bright lights of Madison
Square Garden shined upon them on October 12? The Boys had a brilliant scheme
for their second and final MSG appearance of the fall tour. Before examining
the show, here’s my between-show tale.
The excitement of the “St. Stephen” breakout
was shocking, and painful. At the time it didn’t seem like an extraordinary
show, but when “St. Stephen” appeared out of Space, me and my friend Perry, who
was the lead guitarist in a Dead band called the Lost Boys, battered each other
with slaps and high fives. The pandemonium of the moment was surreal, and the
whole show from 10-11-83 is better than I realized that night. As Perry was
driving us home on the Palisades Parkway in his gray Delta 88, we noticed smoke
coming from the engine. When he pulled over, a small fire was burning beneath
the hood. Fire engines arrived and his car was pronounced dead on the scene—a
sacrifice to the Grateful Gods.
The following day, my Dead mentor and budding
taper, Doug, had a front-row ticket for the show. My ticket was near the
rafters. We got off to a late start and there was plenty of traffic on the
Palisades Parkway. Driving his mom’s yellow Cadillac Coup De Ville, Doug
steered that beast lane to lane at excessive speeds. We were making great time
smoking down the road until we hit George Washington Bridge gridlock. I swear
this kid never hit the breaks, even as he paid the toll. On the bridge, Doug
was a mad genius, creating pathways where none existed. His antics on this
night would have made Neal Cassidy blush. We were in the Garden when our heroes
opened with “Cold Rain and Snow.” It’s a distinct version with shuffling chord
progressions. Jerry played it pretty for New York City.
A mule-kicking “New Minglewood Blues” occupies
the second spot. The band is in their freewheeling, sloppy-hot ’83 mode.
Revelry fills the Garden in the aftermath of the “St. Stephen” breakout, and
the music bustles with Penn Station intensity. The Roses (Ramble and It Must
Have Been), are sung soulfully by Jerry. During back-to-back performances of
“Cassidy” and “Cumberland Blues,” the Dead turn Madison Square Garden into a
furnace. Phil’s bass leads run wild as Jerry attacks each solo with reckless
abandon, leaving no licks behind. “Cumberland” is aggressive bordering on
belligerent. This must be the longest rendition. “Looks Like Rain” and “Might
as Well” end the set anti-climactically.
My preferred viewing spot for a show was about
ten rows up on the opposite side of Jerry, but when set two started on
10-12-83, I was watching from behind the stage. I was awed by the sight of the
crowd as “Help on the Way” kicked off the set. Wide smiles spread across the
faces of 20,000 Deadheads as they bounced to the beat and merrily focused on
the musicians. The building was bouncing. To see the joy of the crowd from the
band’s perspective was awesome. If I wasn’t obsessed with watching Jerry’s fret
board fingering, I would have caught a few more shows from the backstage
perspective.
This became a time-out-of-mind experience as
the band segued into “Slipknot!” It was hard to comprehend how a band could
create such intimate and sophisticated music at a rock concert while
captivating and mesmerizing a hedonistic New York mob. Garcia’s playing has a dark
and stormy aura. Virtuosity rages as group synergy blazes. “Slipknot!” seemed
to steadily improve with each outing since it was returned to the lineup on
3-25-83, and this is the culmination of those efforts. Jerry explores and
extends all possibilities in the arrangement as his guitar buzzes like swarming
bees. The signature line leading to the bridge delivers maximum suspense. As
Garcia leads the ascension, Phil’s blasts rattle building and bones and Weir
smashes down on the whammy bar, forming a stunning collage of sound. In the
slight pause before the bridge, Brent teases the melody to come. The bridge
between Slipknot! > Franklin’s is performed without the slightest stumble,
and the Garden blasts into “Franklin’s Tower” with the Dead.
Before the first verse, Garcia lays down a
beautiful solo and reestablishes the “Franklin’s” beat and wallows in it. A
deafening roar fills the Garden, and Garcia concedes that it’s time to sing,
“In another time’s forgotten space.” Between the last-sung line of “Help” and
the opening line of “Franklin’s,” ten minutes have elapsed. Those ten minutes
comprise the best instrumental jam I ever witnessed from the Grateful Dead. And
there’s more good news because this is one of the hottest “Franklin’s Towers”
ever played.” There are six solos from Garcia, and each one is gripping. Even
on inspired versions of “Franklin’s” you won’t hear anything like this. Garcia
was master of his domain, on top of the guitar world on this tour. And this was
a wise and passionate NYC audience. Listen to them react after the “Listen to
the music play” solo and after Garcia’s final foray. New York and the Dead were
perfect together, especially in 1983.
A start like this usually assures a thrilling
continuation of the set. The remaining set Women Are Smarter > He’s Gone
> Drums > Space > Truckin’ > Black Peter > Not Fade Away was
performed adequately. The insipid selections can probably be explained away by
the Dead’s live song rotation. When the Boys embarked on an eleven-show tour
like this one, you could reasonably expect anywhere from two or three versions
of the following during that run: “Shakedown Street,” Scarlet > Fire,
Estimated > Eyes, “Jack Straw,” “Terrapin Station,” “Sugar Magnolia,” “Let
it Grow,” China Cat >Rider, and if you were lucky, one or two “Morning
Dews.” Although there were no “Dews” during the fall tour of ’83. Anyway, you
get the idea; song selection was science on the fly. After their Blues for Allah masterpiece, the band
probably decided to save some material for upcoming shows, since it was early
in the tour. But they had one more surprise for MSG on 10-12-83 when they broke
out their first “Revolution” in the encore slot. The spirit of John Lennon
soared over the island where he was gunned down less than three years earlier.
For more on the awesome 10-12-81 Munich show
with the longest GDTRFB ever, and other shows from this date, check out
Deadology: The 33 Essential Dates of Grateful Dead History.
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