Phil Lesh and Friends
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2012) |
Phil Lesh and Friends | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | San Francisco, California, United States |
Genres | psychedelic rock, rock, folk rock, jam |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | Columbia Records |
Members | Phil Lesh Additional band members vary from show to show |
Past members | Bob Weir Warren Haynes Jimmy Herring Chris Robinson Larry Campbell Jackie Greene Teresa Williams Jeff Chimenti Grahame Lesh Brian Lesh Joe Russo John Kadlecik Jaz Sawyer Adam MacDougall Luther Dickinson Anders Osborne Vince Welnick Steve Kimock Trey Anastasio Page McConnell Mike Gordon Merle Saunders Donna Jean Godchaux Prairie Prince Jorma Kaukonen Pete Sears Zoe Ellis Cailan Cornwell Bill Kreutzmann David Nelson Barry Sless Mookie Siegel Kyle Hollingsworth Michael Kang Bill Nershi Al Schnier Bobby Strickland Jeff Mattson Rob Barraco Bill Payne Paul Barrere Derek Trucks Robben Ford Jeff Pevar John Molo Ryan Adams Jeff Sipe Joan Osborne John Scofield Greg Osby Steve Molitz Tim Bluhm Nicki Bluhm John Graboff Neal Casal Mark Karan Jason Crosby Scott Law |
Website | http://www.phillesh.net |
Phil Lesh and Friends is an American rock band formed and led by Phil Lesh, former bassist of the Grateful Dead.
Phil & Friends is not a traditional group in that several different lineups of musicians have played under the name, including groups featuring members of Phish, the Black Crowes and Allman Brothers Band.
Music
The Phil & Friends concept takes the music of the Grateful Dead (and an ever-increasing number of other influences, including Bob Dylan, Traffic, The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Warren Haynes' band Gov't Mule, the Allman Brothers, etc.) and explores and interprets it in new ways. Through the period known as the Quintet years (see below), a Phil & Friends show was often focused on harder, faster rock than that which the Grateful Dead played, thanks in large part to Haynes' and Jimmy Herring's talents at the Southern rock style. Lesh was fond of calling it "Dixieland-style rock." However, all of the incarnations of Phil & Friends have followed a trend of "updating" the Grateful Dead's massive body of work, and all have been extremely adept at the long, exploratory jams that were a trademark of the Dead. Phil & Friends has been acclaimed for giving new life to the Grateful Dead's material, bringing in new styles and innovations, while at the same time remaining loyal to the original music and the original fans. It is this melding of musical influences that has given them extremely wide appeal not only among old Deadheads, but the modern-day fans of other jam bands as well.
Phil & Friends has continued the Grateful Dead's tradition of allowing fans to record concerts, and trade these recordings freely. The Internet has been an invaluable source for these tapers to disseminate this music through various sources, including Archive.org, and the vast BitTorrent file-sharing network. Phil has also embraced the Internet by providing free soundboard recordings of many concerts through his website, even providing high-resolution CD covers for fans to print. For his Summer 2006 tour, Phil partnered with Instant Live, a company that was able to provide soundboard CDs of a concert immediately upon its finishing, as well as make these recordings available for fans to download online, though this service was not free.
History
Original Phil Lesh and Friends
The first use of the Phil Lesh and Friends banner was on September 24, 1994 at the Berkeley Community Theater. The band was an acoustic version of the Grateful Dead and featured members Phil Lesh, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Vince Welnick. Dead drummers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart were not part of the band. After this gig the band name was put to rest until Phil formed a new band in 1999.
1999-2000 permutations
From April 1999 to September 2000, Lesh toured with a regularly rotating lineup of musicians that included Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Jorma Kaukonen, Jimmy Herring, Robben Ford, and members of Phish, Little Feat, The String Cheese Incident and Moe.
The opening concerts on April 15, 16, and 17, 1999 featured Phil along with John Molo on drums, Steve Kimock on guitar, and two members of Phish - Trey Anastasio on guitar and Page McConnell on keys.
After these opening concerts and until October 1999, Phil kept the same "core" of himself and Kimock, and generally Molo as well, while regularly rotating in new musicians on guitar and keys (and sometimes additional instruments). Over this period, the lineups included:
- • May 29, 1999: Warren Haynes (guitar and vocals), Merl Saunders (keys), Donna Jean Godchaux (vocals)
- • June 4–5, 1999: Prairie Prince (drums), Jorma Kaukonen (guitar and vocals), Pete Sears (keys), Zoe Ellis (vocals), Cailan Cornwell (vocals)
- • July 2–3, 1999: Bill Kreutzmann (drums), David Nelson (guitar and vocals), Barry Sless (guitar), Mookie Siegel (keys)
- • August 12–22, 1999: This series of shows generally featured Warren Haynes on guitar and vocals and Kyle Hollingsworth from The String Cheese Incident on keys. Other members of The String Cheese Incident (Michael Kang (mandolin and violin), Billy Nershi (guitar)) occasionally joined the group, as did Al Schnier of Moe.
- • October 7–9, 1999: Bobby Strickland (horns), Jeff Mattson (guitar and vocals), Rob Barraco (keys and vocals)
- • October 21–27, 1999: This series of shows featured members of Little Feat -- Bill Payne (keys and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals)
Steve Kimock left the tour on October 29, 1999, and Derek Trucks joined a few days later.
- • October 29–30, 1999: Bill Payne (keys and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals)
- • October 31, 1999: Derek Trucks (guitar), Bill Payne (keys and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals)
From November 1999 onwards, the "core" of the group was Phil, John Molo, and Rob Barraco on keys (except where noted)
- • November 2–14, 1999: Derek Trucks (guitar), Warren Haynes (guitar and vocals);
- • November 15, 1999: Derek Trucks (guitar), Warren Haynes (guitar and vocals), Jorma Kaukonen (guitar and vocals);
- • November 17–18, 1999: Warren Haynes (guitar and vocals), Jorma Kaukonen (guitar and vocals);
- • March 10, 2000: Robben Ford (guitar and vocals), Bill Payne (keys and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals)
- • April 6-May 27, 2000: Jeff Pevar (guitar and vocals), Jimmy Herring (guitar)
For the summer 2000 tour, the lineup primarily consistent of Robben Ford and members of Little Feat
- • June 12-July 15, 2000: Robben Ford (guitar and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals), Bill Payne (keys and vocals)
- • July 16–18, 2000: Jimmy Herring (guitar), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals), Bill Payne (keys and vocals)
- • July 19–30, 2000: Robben Ford (guitar and vocals), Paul Barrere (guitar and vocals), Bill Payne (keys and vocals)
The Phil Lesh Quintet
This section needs additional citations for verification. (November 2010) |
The most permanent of the Phil Lesh and Friends lineups, known as the Phil Lesh Quintet (PLQ or just "the Q" for short) played on a mostly-regular basis from September 2000 through December 2003. The members of this incarnation were Lesh, Warren Haynes (guitar & vocals; also of Gov't Mule and Allman Brothers Band), Jimmy Herring (guitar; The Dead, Allman Brothers Band, Aquarium Rescue Unit, and most recently Widespread Panic), Rob Barraco (keyboards;The Dead, the Zen Tricksters, Dark Star Orchestra) and John Molo (drums; Bruce Hornsby and the Range, The Other Ones, Modereko, Keller Williams, David Nelson Band, Jemimah Puddleduck, and John Fogerty).
This lineup released the only Phil Lesh and Friends studio album, There and Back Again, on Columbia Records in 2002. It included several new songs from Lesh and Robert Hunter, longtime Grateful Dead lyricist, as well as one recent favorite from Jerry Garcia and Hunter, and several original contributions from Haynes, Barraco/Mattson and Herring.
The Quintet is generally regarded as the strongest continuous lineup of Phil Lesh and Friends. Dead instrumentals such as Blues for Allah were reworked into modal jazz stylings, while fan favorites like Foolish Heart were reexamined with brilliant results. In just over three years the Quintet built a separate identity from Grateful Dead music, while still honoring Lesh's work in whole.
During the summer tour of 2001, the band performed a series of instrumental numbers composed by Lesh. The songs were inspired by the solar system. While they were never officially released on an album, they have come to be known as the Planet Jams. A very popular bootleg compilation of these songs has been circulating since then.
Post Quintet Era
Ryan Adams started performing with the band in June 2005, followed by Chris Robinson in November/December 2005.
2006
During 2006, Phil Lesh and Friends consisted of a core of musicians including Lesh, Larry Campbell (guitar, violin, slide guitar, mandolin, and vocals), Joan Osborne (vocals), Rob Barraco (keyboards and vocals), and John Molo (drums). On the first half of the summer tour, they were joined by John Scofield (guitar), and on the second half, by Barry Sless (pedal steel) and, during the third quarter of the tour and generally for the second set, by Trey Anastasio. Saxophonist Greg Osby joined the group for various concerts, particularly toward the end of the tour, and guest artists including Page McConnell and Dickey Betts sat in for individual sets.
Concerts with Scofield had a jazzy, astringent quality. Anastasio contributed a strong rock lead guitar to the sets he played in, while Sless brought a softer, more lyrical quality. The relative lack of comment about these lineups compared to the earlier "Quintet" and later 2007-8 configuration suggests that they were not as popular with Lesh's core fan base, but they gave unique and varied interpretations to some of the Grateful Dead's classics along with numerous other songs. Furthermore, the fact that the entire tour was distributed online and later via Instant Live CDs, and a live DVD was made of an early concert at the Warfield (with Scofield and Osby), meant that the various configurations of the year's lineup left a larger body of recorded work than many groups that worked together for years.
2007–2008
A new formation of Phil & Friends, including Lesh, Larry Campbell (guitar, mandolin, fiddle), Teresa Williams (vocals), Jackie Greene (vocals and guitar), Steve Molitz (keyboards), and John Molo (drums), debuted in September 2007 in Santa Barbara, California.
On February 4, 2008, Phil and Friends joined Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir and drummer Mickey Hart, along with Barry Sless and Ratdog guitarist Mark Karan, for a concert called "Deadheads for Obama", in support of Barack Obama's presidential campaign. The show was the first time that Weir, Hart, and Lesh had played together since 2004. Even more recently, the band performed the final shows at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco, California. Bob Weir sat in for a run of five nights that included sets of the Grateful Dead's first few albums.
In the fall of 2008, Phil Lesh and Friends toured the Eastern United States, including a run of 14 shows in 19 days, known as "Philathon", at the Nokia Theatre Times Square in New York City. The final Phil Lesh and Friends performance until 2012 was on 12/31/08. Meanwhile, Phil has been touring with The Dead and Furthur.
2012
On Phil Lesh's website, 3 dates at the 1stBank Center in Broomfield, Colorado, were scheduled for the February 16, 17, and 18. A twelve-date appearance at Lesh's new club, Terrapin Crossroads, is set to commence on March 17, 2012, which many old members of the band returning to appear alongside Lesh, as well as a few new members.[1]
On April 26 through April 29 the original Quintet returned, performing four sold out shows at Terrapin Crossroads.
The band also appeared at the 2012 Gathering of the Vibes and All Good Music Festival, featuring Phil Lesh, Jackie Greene, Grahame Lesh, Brian Lesh, Joe Russo, Larry Campbell, and Teresa Williams
2014
In 2014, Phil Lesh signed an exclusive deal with concert promoter Peter Shapiro to perform 44 concerts across Shapiro's venues. Thirty of those performances would take place at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York, with the others at the Brooklyn Bowls in New York, London and Las Vegas, as well as the Lockn' Festival in Arrington, Virginia.[2]
Phil Lesh and Friends featuring Warren Haynes, Jackie Greene, John Medeski and Joe Russo performed two shows on April 14 and 15 at Brooklyn Academy of Music, the first time that Lesh had performed there. On May 25, 1989 Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman took part in the "Don't Bungle the Jungle" benefit at Brooklyn Academy of Music. Also participating that night were Madonna, the Del Fuegos and the B-52s.
Phil and Friends then played two shows at Central Park's Rumsey Playfield on May 28 and 31. The incarnation of this band included Warren Haynes, John Scofield, John Medeski and Joe Russo.[3]
Discography
- Love Will See You Through (1999)
- There and Back Again (2002)
- Live at the Warfield (2006)
References
- ^ "12 Show Phil Lesh & Friends Run At Terrapin Crossroads". Jambase.com. February 13, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
- ^ "Phil Lesh Signs Deal with Peter Shapiro for 2014 Shows", Jambands.com. November 3, 2013. Retrieved July 1, 2014.
- ^ "Phil Lesh & Friends to Play Second Central Park Show", Relix. April 30, 2014. Retrieved July 1, 2014.
External links
- PhilLesh.net — Phil Lesh's official website
- PhilZone.com — fan website
- Live recordings by Phil Lesh and Friends at the Internet Archive