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I think the biggest thing is everybody just has to fucking relax. They got their first two shows out of the way. The pressure must have been enormous. They've likely had a chance to reflect and realize that they can do it now. as long as they have fun, so will everybody else.

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I think tongiht is the only night I will be able to catch live. Looking forward to it based on what I have heard from GD50. Here's a thought........is it possible they might not repeat a song over the 5 shows? I suppose it is but can you imagine they dropped their heaviest hitters (debate for another day) on the very first night?

 

Really? None of these?

 

“Truckin’” / “Uncle John’s Band” / “Alligator” / “Cumberland Blues” / “Born Cross-Eyed” / “Cream Puff War” / “Viola Lee Blues” / “Cryptical Envelopment” / “Dark Star” / “St. Stephen” / “The Eleven” / “Turn On Your Love Light” / “Drums / Space” / “What’s Become of the Baby” / “The Other One” / “Morning Dew” / Encore: “Casey Jones”

That setlist fucking kicks g-damn ass! !!!! !!! It's easily still my favorite. Aside from the encore, gotta be Bid You Goodnight provided they actually worked on some harmonies, I would guess that might be the closer in Chicago.

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That first set was fantastic. I cant say for sure but............

 

Shakedown Street

Liberty (HUGELY underated song, the last 3 Garcia/Hunter tunes were insanely good much like all of them)

Standing On The Moon ( sometimes droogzybeers are great because I assumed we were on the third S-song of the night and my Phish-fan brain giggled thinking they might be doing an all S set)

Me And My Uncle

Tenessee Jed

Cumberland Blues

Little Red Rooster

Friend Of The Devil

Deal

 

Jed (not a fan of that song) and Deal were absolutely smoking.

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I think tongiht is the only night I will be able to catch live. Looking forward to it based on what I have heard from GD50. Here's a thought........is it possible they might not repeat a song over the 5 shows? I suppose it is but can you imagine they dropped their heaviest hitters (debate for another day) on the very first night?

 

Really? None of these?

 

“Truckin’” / “Uncle John’s Band” / “Alligator” / “Cumberland Blues” / “Born Cross-Eyed” / “Cream Puff War” / “Viola Lee Blues” / “Cryptical Envelopment” / “Dark Star” / “St. Stephen” / “The Eleven” / “Turn On Your Love Light” / “Drums / Space” / “What’s Become of the Baby” / “The Other One” / “Morning Dew” / Encore: “Casey Jones”

That setlist fucking kicks g-damn ass! !!!! !!! It's easily still my favorite. Aside from the encore, gotta be Bid You Goodnight provided they actually worked on some harmonies, I would guess that might be the closer in Chicago.

They did Drums last night, so I guess more repeats are possible.

I never noticed before that Little Red Rooster is a 13 bar blues.

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I was live texting with Andre/Booche during the first set (I was at the gig and he had to go to bed). Anyway, great show. The harmonies were fine and the band was in good form; set list was pretty perfect. Audio was spotty during first set (deafening Trey, or organ, or Bobby's guitar). I really admire Trey for playing and assuming Jerry's guitar role. He tackled the leads with respect and a great deal of enthusiasm and fuck all those that didn't support his inclusion in all this. He was the ONLY choice, and I don't even like Phish much any more.

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http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/grateful-dead-end-50-year-career-with-moving-magnificent-final-show-20150706

 

"I have spent my life/Seeking all that's still unsung/Bent my ear to hear the tune," sang Phil Lesh last night, harmonizing with colleagues new and old, on "Attics of My Life," the final song of a fraught, moving, ultimately magnificent five-night, two-state Fare The Well concert series — billed as the final shows that the surviving members of the Grateful Dead will ever perform together. The final concert was also the run's strongest, showcasing a new band hitting its stride precisely as it was set to retire. The new guys — Phish's Trey Anastasio, RatDog's Jeff Chimenti and returning moonlighter Bruce Hornsby — found equal footing and perfect sync with original band members Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzman and Mickey Hart. It was clear from the opener, "China Cat Sunflower" into "I Know You Rider," one of the band's most emblematic and potent pairings. When Anastasio and Hornsby, not Weir or Lesh, traded lead vocals on the former, it felt like a torch was passed. And when the 70,000 fans sang "I know you rider/Gonna miss me when I'm gone" during the latter, it was like they were singing those words to each other.

SIDEBAR
300x169-GettyImages-479433488-(1).jpg
The Grateful Dead Say Farewell: Fricke's View From the Bowl »

As good as the music was, much of the night's magic was in the connections: meeting fellow fans, finding out where they travelled from, a bit of what their lives are like, how long ago they saw their first Dead show; or showering ushers and security staff with grins, salutations and high-fives, like a bunch of tipsy, T-shirted Jehovah's Witnesses working a neighborhood. I came to this show with a friend who joined me at my first Dead show in 1977, but variously hung and partied with a Santa Monica children's book writer, a Wisconsin college professor, an L.A. vapor-pen manufacturer and an Illinois Spanish teacher. Strangers stopped strangers just to shake their hand, share a joint, dance a jig, hug it out or serenade each other. Friends and lovers sang into each others' mouths and dove into each others' eyes, swimming through flashbacks of who-knows-what. 

1035x812-DSC_3914.jpgBob Weir 

If there's a lesson in this, it's that music's true value is not so much about the individual players, distinguished and virtuosic as they might be; it's about the beauty, pleasure and love it communicates, and the community it engenders. The relationship Deadheads have with these songs is deeply personal: We've eaten, slept, and breathed this music, bonded and tripped and fucked and fallen in love to it. It seems to carry with it an implicit set of spiritual, ethical and hedonistic values, and it marks the tribe, which extends beyond the Dead's music. Over the course of this weekend's shows, improv-minded acts flooded Chicago. Among them were Jerry Garcia's old confidant and side-project partner David Grisman, who played jazzy bluegrass fusion with his sextet on Sunday afternoon to a reverent mob at the historic Palmer House Hotel ballroom. The town became jam-band ground zero.

SIDEBAR
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Inside the Grateful Dead's Final Ride »

But it was all gravy for the final event. Sunday's set list was scattershot, a mix of songs not yet played during the previous shows with the exception of "Drums"/"Space" and the signature "Truckin,'" whose iconic reprise "What a long, strange trip it's been" never felt so earned. There was a powerful "Estimated Prophet," with a guitar rave-up so intense, Bob Weir missed his vocal cue. A leisurely stroll of a jam came out of "Mountains of the Moon," cast more as a jazzy blues than the space chant of the studio recording, with notes looking around and smelling the flowers. Lesser songs ("Built to Last," "Throwing Stones") featured some of the night's most beautiful playing. It proved a Dead truism that when the group of abstractionists is on point, the specific material isn't always important.

For his part, Anastasio — the show's wild card, as the man who had to fill Jerry Garcia's shoes — came across as a musician transformed. He worked grooves more supple than most anything in the repertoire of Phish, his day job, with remarkable restraint, marked by longer sustains and more soulful phrasing, while his signature antsy-ness help embellish and goose along slower songs. Maybe his finest moments were on a majestically thundering "Terrapin Station," where he spun out lines like baroque morse code. It's hard to imagine that his playing won't emerge significantly changed from this experience.

"Terrapin"'s lyrical crescendo — "but the train's put its brakes on and the whistle is screaming" — would be echoed much later in the night's improvisational "Drums"/"Space," with a howling electronic outburst of train whistle and shrieking brake tones, followed eventually by the angular jazz-funk of "Unbroken Chain." Bob Weir delivered a haunting version "Days Between," a darkly handsome obscurity written by poet-lyricist Robert Hunter and Garcia during the guitarist's plagued final days. It moved like a processional, graced by Anastasio's slow-motion melody lines, earning itself a newly privileged place in the band's songbook. 

1035x736-DSC_2943.jpgTrey Anastasio and Phil Lesh 

The show ended with Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away" fading out beneath 70,000 fans chanting the title reprise and clapping out the beat even after the band left the stage — yet another family tradition. Phil Lesh, the Dead's default leader since Garcia's death, came back before the encore to pitch the importance of organ donation (he is most likely alive because of a 1998 liver transplant) and to thank fans for listening.

Two more songs, the last accompanied on the projection screens by a brief photographic history, and it was done. The band repeated the bow and group hug sequence, while fans cheered and brushed away tears. Mickey Hart offered some parting words: "The feeling we have here," he said, "remember it, take it home and do some good with it." And then approximately 70,000 Deadheads floated out of Soldier Field and up through Grant Park, presumably with thoughts of doing just that.

Set 1:
"China Cat Sunflower" > "I Know You Rider"
"Estimated Prophet"
"Built to Last"
"Samson and Delilah"
"Mountains of the Moon" > "Throwing Stones"

Set 2:
"Truckin'"
"Cassidy"
"Althea"
"Terripin Station"
"Drums" > "Space"
"Unbroken Chain"
"Days Between"
"Not Fade Away"

Encores:

"Touch of Grey"
"Attics of My Life"


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/grateful-dead-end-50-year-career-with-moving-magnificent-final-show-20150706#ixzz3fBjkMWtI 
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

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Damn well written article, doncha think?  Baroque morse code...I love it!

 

As an aside, this phrase perfectly sums up why I've always found it strange when people judge a show based simply on reading the setlist:  "...when the group of abstractionists is on point, the specific material isn't always important."

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