4-15 John Paul Jones Arena

Live Show Downloads

This marks the first time in 27 years that an incarnation of the band has appeared in Charlottesville, VA. The last time they visited the city was 9/14/82 when the Grateful Dead performed at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. That show was on a very, very good tour of the east coast and the south that featured some mighty fine performances. It included a terrific first set that contained some of my favourite first set tunes, including Jack Straw, Big RR Blues, Bird Song and Lazy Lightning>Supplication. The second continued this run of inspired playing, with an Iko Iko out of space, and a rare show-closing Bertha.

The Grateful Dead’s history in Virginia goes back to 1973, when the band performed two great shows at William and Mary College in Williamsburg, up to the Hampton shows in 1992, with a total of 37 shows in the state. Hampton, of course, was the most famous place for the Grateful Dead to play in Virginia, but other stops in the state worth noting include Roanoke, Blacksburg and Richmond.

We'll update this page shortly after the show with the setlist and to recap each performance by The Dead as it relates to the context of the Grateful Dead's history at this venue or city.

Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux will be out on the road with The Dead at selected shows, including this one. He'll be hanging out at the Grateful Dead Productions merchandise booth to answer questions, talk about the archives, or anything else. This booth will have available the brand-new Hartford '77 release, Rocking The Cradle: Egypt 1978, and loads of other great music, and is the only place aside from dead.net where you'll be able to pick up the 9-CD Winterland 1973 boxed set and all of the Road Trips releases including the recent Volume 2 Number 2 from 2/14/68. David will be around before each show, at the set break, and after the show, so feel free to come by and say hi.


Charlottesville, VA Pre-Show

This is one beautiful city. The people down here are so, well, nice. Having lived on the west coast for so long, I’ve come across loads of great people, but there is a noticeable warmth in regular interactions with just about everyone. So, thanks, Virginia, you’ve made us all feel at home. The venue here, the John Paul Jones Arena, is on the campus of the University of Virginia, and is the home to the university’s basketball teams, a nice new venue. It’s a smaller venue than the past two nights, with tonight’s venue closer to 13,000. People are slowly making their way to the area, and the buzz is beginning. It was fun driving through Richmond and seeing the Coliseum, where the Grateful Dead played some great shows in November, 1985.

The scene outside was a little reminiscent of Greensboro in that it was a large parking lot, although it was much colder day than Greensboro. As soundcheck wraps up, the feeling is for another solid night of music, hopefully with some more surprises...

Set 1

Starting out right where they left off last night, with another track from 1970, this time Workingman’s Dead’s New Speedway Boogie. It took the audience by surprise, and within seconds everyone was up and dancing. A terrific vocal outro closed the song, with the crowd clapping along to rhythm of the song. It was pretty darn cool. Jumping into another nearly-as-old track, Bertha, from 1971, kept people shaking, which was very appropriate considering the weather. Indeed, ran into a rain storm! A huge cheer for that line. A little nuanced thing was during the closing chorus on Bertha, Warren did these tasty little guitar fills while he was singing. In keeping with the early 1970s theme, next up was a Warren-sung High Time that was extremely well-played. So, far, a very solid start to the show! Next was another 1969-1970 gem, Mason’s Children. It featured some really fine guitar work by Warren, and after a lengthy and inspired jam, Phil brought back the melody of the song for the final verse. In keeping with the so-far-nothing-before-1971 show, next up was Big Boss Man. Bluesy, meaty and raunchy, with a great slide guitar solo by Warren. I’m seeing a trend here, with early MVP-of-the-evening honours leaning in Warren’s direction. Woe, next is 1969’s Doin’ That Rag. People who like older Dead (like, all of us…) are smiling ear-to-ear. Jumping ahead 20 years in GD history, the show then goes to 1989 with Standing On The Moon. A nice spot for a mellower tune.

Set 2

Second set opened with a terrific, jammed out Playing In The Band, which was almost the end of your intrepid reporter’s reportage, as my laptop was stolen while I was out enjoying the music. But, during Crazy Fingers, the perpetrator was spotted, dropped the computer and ran. So, on to the show. Crazy Fingers dropped smoothly into Drums, with the Rhythm Devils on this tour being outstanding so far. Great sounds and themes coming from the drummers. Then came a way-out Space, during which Bobby, as always, played some unguitar-like guitar sounds. That flowed beautifully into St. Stephen, played very nicely by the participants. The jam in the middle of St. Stephen was very intense and nearly blew the roof off the house, with Warren once again providing a stellar boost. Flowing into a very welcome The Eleven, the show’s energy just kept growing. Then came an unexpected but really playing Mississippi Half-Step, with a nice “Across the Rio Grand-eo” ending. Dropping into Playing In The Band was a beautiful way to head toward the end of the show. It was always nice at a GD show when they’d do the Playing Reprise even though you’d forgotten they’d played an hour earlier. Then came Foolish Heart, one of Jerry’s finest latter-day compositions. It had a nice little jam in the middle. Encore: G-L-O-R-I-A!!!! Nice!!! Greensboro and DC were very good shows, but this one, to my ears, was the most pleasing so far. Which is to say, it keeps getting better every night.

One little side thing to note is how great Phil has been sounding in the hall, owing greatly (I assume) to his wonderful new bass, as well as the front of house mix by the extremely talented mixer Derek Featherstone. He’s got the band sounding great.

Read more about the Dead in our local and national press section.


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Setlist

(Set 1)

  •   New Speedway Boogie
  •   Bertha
  •   High Time
  •   Mason's Children
  •   Big Boss Man
  •   Doin' That Rag
  •   Standing On The Moon

    (Set 2)

  •   Playin' In The Band>
  •   Crazy Fingers>
  •   Drums>
  •   Space>
  •   St. Stephen>
  •   The Eleven>
  •   Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo>
  •   Playin' In The Band>
  •   Foolish Heart
  •   Donor Rap

  • (Encore)

  •   G-L-O-R-I-A

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Charlottesville 4-15-09

avatar

Wow... It has been a long time since I went to see the Dead... And, now I wonder why I waited so long... Thanks for some amazing flash backs... I was glad I was finally able to turn my son on to the "Music Never Stopped!"

Charlottesville

This show was as good as it gets until the end of The Eleven. Then they either were exhausted, or something went wrong. It was a shame, because it really was a show for the ages to that point.

The St. Stephen was as powerful as anything I've ever seen them do, but they blew the transition from The Eleven to Mississippi Half-Step and never fully recovered. The Playin' reprise lacked total conviction, and Foolish Heart didn't really work as the show-stopper. The Gloria encore was fine, but seemed like an abrupt ending to the show (perhaps because of the incredible UJB-Ripple encore the night before).

Whatever, this relatively brief lapse at the end was a minor disappointment to the revelatory performance of the night. The third show demonstrated that they still have whatever it was that powered their creation more than 40 years ago. The first set was almost perfect in both song choice and execution, and the second set was even better until the end of The Eleven. The energy from the second set in Washington carried over, but perhaps ran out just a bit too soon.

And both Warren and Jeff were brilliant. Warren played his heart out, and it is unfortunate that the crowd doesn't acknowledge him a bit more. As the tour goes on, he'll generate more reaction.

does anyone know if any

does anyone know if any tapers are going to be putting last nights show on archive. I think by far last night was the best sets I've seen so far (this tour anyway)

What's in a Name?

"The Dead" are as good as it get's, yes I am biased and love this music to death, so my review of the past two nights can be summed up with the following: All I could think about was how much this band feels like home (Universe Home) how sad I will be after I jump off Friday in Philly and how happy I am I decided to break the bank and see 9 show's. Never Give Your Love My Friend Unto A Foolish Heart.....
.
David Hickey
Paiste Gongs and Quartz Crystal Bowls Sound Journey
www.crystaljourney.ca

C-ville

OK- so the Warren bashing, which on Dead.net pales in comparison to what goes on in the "Philzone" is nothing short of ridiculous.

I saw this band fading out in the 90's as Jerry went into his Heroine induced tunnel. There is NO WAY that if Jerry were alive right now that I would have seen a show that good in C-ville. That show blew EVERY 94-95 show off the map. I can't wait for someone to disagree so I can enjoy a hearty laugh. In fact, it probably ranks in my top 10 Dead shows attended of all time (out of maybe 60) - as far as musical playing. BELIEVE ME - I understand the chemistry and feel are not the same without Jerry, but the Warren bashing is just ignorant. The guy is good. Period.

The scene was alright I suppose. The crowd was a bit stiff until the after the second set, when I think everyone realized the treat they just enjoyed and gave appropriate applause.

My overall take on my first show in 9 years: The band was more "Deadlike" than the crowd and the scene. Great job fellas!

To be fair, sounds like G-boro hosted a better scene than C-ville. Lighten up will ya C-ville?

Just listened to the SBD of

Just listened to the SBD of the first show last night. I am surprised there would be any Warren-bashing at all. He is the perfect choice. He's contributing more than Bobby, in my opinion. But the interplay of everyone during Shakedown, Warren's vocal delivery on Caution, Phil's benevolent leadership with the bass lines, all these intro jams they're doing, building the anticipation of wondering where they're going -- it's all wonderful!!! I'm a little surprised at what seems like low energy from the crowds. People complaining about the Dark Star -- what band did you think you were coming to see?? That was a fine DS and a wonderful pairing with Marbles. My only complaint concerns some timing issues. Lazy River Road was absolutely sleep-inducing. Pick up the tempo on some of this stuff, guys!! I also think I can hear just the most subtle tentativeness in Warren's playing, which I'm sure is out of respect for the position he's in. I say, Warren- cut loose baby!! Rip into this stuff like the man you are!!

What an awesome show. Very

What an awesome show. Very "old" style Dead, which I really liked. The acoustics at JPJ Arena are off the charts. What a great music venue; not a bad seat in the house. JPJ could relax on the strict seat policies; being less tied to our "assigned" seats and more dancing space would have really been most enjoyable. But all the same LOVED the show.

JPJ-Gloria...

Great to hear Gloria. Not sure what Bobby was saying in his rap, but I'll check the recordings. I think Bobby's overall guitar work is so crisp right now! So we'll gladly let the storytelling lapse and memory issues slide if he is going to keep ringing it out with laser-like lightning precision.

Vocals on SOTM?

Who sang the vocals on SOTM?

WTF with the download?

avatar

About to head to Worcester for the two DCU shows. I thought it would be cool to download the Charlottesville show to listen to during the ride. I get to the downloads page -- NO LINK. Is there a delay or something before the link goes up? They certainly charged my bank account. What a bummer.

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