Even though
Jerry Garcia (guitar/vocals) remained at the helm of the
Grateful Dead in the '90s, many enthusiasts felt as if his passions lay with his solo congregate. The eponymously titled double-CD set boasts over two hours of support for that theory.
Jerry Garcia Band (1991) was documented in 1990 from a series of shows at the
Warfield Theater in San Francisco. The quartet is led by the guitarist and features longtime
Garcia associate
John Kahn (bass),
Melvin Seals (keyboards),
David Kemper (drums),
Gloria Jones (vocals), and
Jackie LaBranch (vocals). The selections accurately image the wide spectrum of
pop,
R&B,
rock and
soul covers
Garcia and company played circa the late '80s and early '90s. In a wise move, producers
Garcia,
Kahn, and
John Cutler decided not to tread heavily into the
Dead's expansive catalog. Only a churning
gospel-flavored reading of
"Deal" cross between each combo's respective and distinct styles.
Garcia's rush upon rush of incendiary fretwork equals the verve in practically any
Grateful Dead rendering during the early '90s. However, the primary focus is divided between the superior choice of material and equally adroit execution.
Robbie Robertson's
"The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" and
Allen Toussaint's
"Get Out My Life" had become staples of
Garcia's non-
Dead repertoire as far back as the mid-'70s. They have matured comfortably, yet retained a potency which continues to propel and inspire
Garcia and
Seals' interactive and intuitive solos. The same holds for
John Kahn's prominence on
Dylan's
"Simple Twist of Fate" and the languid pulsation he summons on
the Beatles'
"Dear Prudence." As an ensemble, the
Jerry Garcia Band keep the funky syncopated synergies and intricate instrumentation of
los Lobos' uptempo and rollicking
"Evangeline," or the spacey and heavily jammed reading of
Jesse Stone's
R&B rave-up
"Don't Let Go." The latter adopts a jazzy shuffle and is punctuated by some of
Garcia's stretched out
psychedelic contributions. While there is not a subpar track on this collection, other pieces worthy of mention are the languid
"Lucky Old Sun," which is swaddled in
Jones and
LaBranch's soulful vocals. The even groove of
Bruce Cockburn's
"Waiting for a Miracle" is interpreted by
Garcia with the same conviction he lent to many of
Robert Hunter's more poignant lyrics. The initiated and initially curious alike will find much to enjoy and discover throughout
Jerry Garcia Band. ~ Lindsay Planer