Phil Lesh and Friends - Ramble at Terrapin Crossroads May 2012. L to R: Adam MacDougall, Jon Graboff, Jaz Sawyer, Tim Bluhm, Chris Robinson, Phil lesh, John Skehan, Graham Lesh © Jay Blakesberg
Phil Lesh brought a piece of Everywhere home to Marin County, fulfilling a longstanding dream with the opening of Terrapin Crossroads, an intimate new live music venue and restaurant, located in San Rafael (just a short hop from the Grateful Dead’s old recording/rehearsal studio, Club Front). Phil had been wishing for years for a great little place, close to home and away from the rigors of the road, where he could regularly make music in a relaxed setting with some of his talented friends. In envisioning Terrapin Crossroads, Phil was particularly inspired by his visits to the home studio/performance space of the late, great Levon Helm in Woodstock, NY. Levon regularly held wonderfully informal events he called “Midnight Rambles,” in which he played with his own band and welcomed an ever-changing cast of musical guests. Phil got Levon’s blessing to bring the Rambles concept to the West Coast, and set about looking for the ideal site. The original plan was to build a new facility from the ground up in the town of Fairfax, but that project encountered some of the daunting logistical obstacles that often thwart such an endeavor. That setback, however, turned out to be a blessing in disguise, because just after abandoning the Fairfax plan, Phil found out that a venerable San Rafael institution, The Seafood Peddler restaurant, was up for sale… and the building also happened to house the Palm Ballroom, a cozy room that was the perfect size for the venue he had in mind. In a remarkably swift turnaround period after acquiring the property at the end of 2011, Phil and a very dedicated team set about installing a new Meyer Sound P.A. system, sprucing up the building, getting the restaurant staffed and the venue ready to unofficially open on Valentine’s Day, with a spectacular lineup featuring Phil, Furthur colleagues Jeff Chimenti and Joe Russo, jazz guitar master John Scofield and longtime Lesh associates Warren Haynes and Jackie Greene.
Furthur at Terrapin Crossroads, June 30, 2012 © Jay Blakesberg
Since then, Phil’s been playing Terrapin every chance he gets, several nights a week, both in the main music space (dubbed “The Grate Room”) and in more impromptu gatherings in the bar area of the restaurant (and when weather permits, out on the patio). Musical guests have included Chris Robinson, Jimmy Herring, Rob Barraco, John Molo, Larry Campbell, Teresa Williams, Tim and Nicki Bluhm, Stanley Jordan, Mark Karan, all the members of Furthur (separately and collectively), Yonder Mountain String Band and Railroad Earth. Adding to the warm familial and multigenerational vibe at the Crossroads is the frequent presence of Phil’s very talented sons, Grahame and Brian, who have played with their dad in an assortment of configurations (and also did some out-of-town gigs as part of a Phil & Friends lineup that hit the festival circuit this summer). Some of the especially memorable events included a 70th Birthday Tribute to Jerry Garcia; a reunion of the classic Phil & Friends lineup (aka the “PLQ”) of Lesh, Haynes, Herring, Molo and Barraco; a multi-night Furthur run in preparation for Summer tour; and a heartfelt tribute to Levon Helm shortly after his passing, at which Phil and guests performed in sequence all the songs from the classic second album by The Band. At that show, Phil said “I dedicate not just this show, or the next show, or everything we do here, but the whole place, to Levon Helm.
Not surprisingly, Terrapin Crossroads instantly became a magnet for Dead Heads from the Bay Area and around the world. And by the way, the restaurant is anything but an afterthought to the music venue – it has become a huge success in its own right, and got a rave three-star review from the San Francisco Chronicle’s notoriously picky food critic, Michael Bauer.
Bob with Chris Robinson and Jackie Greene, Summer Camp Music Festival, May 2012 © Jay Blakesberg
Bob Weir’s version of Everywhere meant that he went right on doing what’s he’s been up to pretty much continuously since he was 16: traveling the country, making music and having as much fun as he possibly can. But this past year things were a bit different: instead of just touring with one band, Weir seemed hellbent on playing in as many different, challenging musical contexts as he possibly could. In addition to the usual busy touring regimen with Furthur, he performed in several brand-new formats, with various collaborators and all by his lonesome. In the spring, Bob embarked on his first-ever solo acoustic tour – just Weir, his voice, a guitar and his bare right foot – the latter item lending a nice one-man-band quality, as Bobby used that foot for percussion, tapping it in time on what he called his “stomp box” – the lid of a road case, laid on the floor and outfitted with a contact mic, producing a surprisingly convincing kick-drum-like sound. Never one to take the easy way out, Weir didn’t just do the simple, campfire-friendly folkish material, either, but chose several tunes many might find daunting to pull off all alone (like the full “Weather Report Suite,” for example) and, well, aced ‘em. Bob also hooked up for some tour dates in a dynamic acoustic trio with Jackie Greene and Chris Robinson, and made a brief swing to some festivals with old friends Bruce Hornsby and Branford Marsalis (starting out the sets as a guitar/piano/sax trio, then gradually welcoming Hornsby’s band, The Noisemakers, to the stage).
Bobby was no less busy, it seemed, when not on the road, eschewing that “back home, sit down and patch my bones” stuff in favor of more music making. A lot of that took place at TRI Studios, the state-of-the-art performance/recording/webcasting facility (aka “the ultimate playpen for musicians”) that Weir and partners opened in the spring of 2011.
Bruce, Branford and Bob, Gathering of The Vibes, July 2012 © Jay Blakesberg
Rolling into its second year, TRI was a whirlwind of activity, hosting a busy schedule of performances, some with Bobby and various friends, others with a range of visiting artists, including both well-known musicians and emerging young talent. Excerpts from many of the webcasts can be found at the TRI website, and also at Yahoo! Music, with which TRI established a partnership this year.