The second was speculation about the trumpet player. It turns out to be
.
Regarding personnel, it’s probably worth noting that Garcia (I presume – could also have been Merl and/or John) was looking for something more than what he got out of the guitar-bass-keys-drums quartet setup. Of course there had been second guitarists, from
Tom Fogerty (mid-1971 to late 1972, on and off) to
George Tickner (ca. spring 1973).
Sarah Fulcher had been around in the first part of ’73 and would appear with Garcia/Saunders at least as late as October, singing in her very distinctive scatting style.
Martin Fierro would come in two weeks to the day from the performance being noted here (7/19/73, Great American Music Hall) and would be more or less around for two solid years, seemingly giving the band the fill and color that they (or someone) wanted.
Anyway, an interesting show and a really nice tape. Listening notes follow after the jump.
Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders
The Lion’s Share
60 Red Hill Road
San Anselmo, CA, 94960
July 5, 1973 (Thursday)
–set I (6 tracks, 79:19)–
s1t01. After Midnight [10:22] [1:33]
s1t02. Someday Baby [9:02] [1:00]
s1t03. She’s Got Charisma [18:39] ->
s1t04. That’s Alright, Mama [13:01] [0:17]
s1t05. The System [18:37] [0:47]
s1t06. The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down [5:40] (1) [0:18]
–set II (8 tracks, 96:46)–
s2t01. [0:17] I Second That Emotion [13:09] (2) [1:16]
s2t02. My Funny Valentine [18:54] [0:32]
s2t03. Finders Keepers [9:18] [0:29]
s2t04. Money Honey [8:17] [0:13]
s2t05. [0:12] Like A Road [9:18] [2:08]
s2t06. Merl’s Tune [16:43] ->
s2t07. collective improvisation … [9:55] [0:04] %
s2t08. How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You) [5:40] (3) [0:19]
! ACT1: Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders
! lineup: Jerry Garcia – el-g, vocals;
! lineup: Merl Saunders – keyboards, synthesizers;
! lineup: John Kahn – el-bass;
! lineup: Bill Vitt – drums;
! guest: ?? – trumpet (set II only).
JGMF:
! Recording: symbols: % = recording discontinuity; / = clipped song; // = cut song; … = fade in/out; # = truncated timing; [ ] = recorded event time. The recorded event time immediately after the song or item name is an attempt at getting the “real” time of the event. So, a timing of [x:xx] right after a song title is an attempt to say how long the song really was, as represented on this recording.
! db:
shnid-79032 (this source). Given lineage: MSR > DAT4x > Delta DIO 2496 > Soundforge > WAV > CD Wave Editor > FLAC; via alligator.
! R: Seeder notes: There are a couple of digital “snits” in there including a small one near the beginning of the first song.
! setlist: When this was released, both “The System” and “Merl’s Tune” were just identified as instrumentals. The correct titles were nominated by “sl halper” at deadnetcentral and have been confirmed. This is certainly an interesting setlist, with three bona fide Saunders-penned rarities: “She’s Got Charisma”, “The System”, and “Merl’s Tune”. The first is a slow blues, in the same emotional register as “Lonely Avenue”. The title is a little fluid. It was first released on the vinyl Fire Up (Fantasy 9421, 1973) as “Charisma (She’s Got)” and lacking Garcia. As Alex Allan notes, it was “not on the subsequent CD Fire Up Plus”, but did appear on the 1997 Keepers CD (Fantasy FCD-7712) with a 1972 date and renamed “She’s Got Charisma”. I use the later-officialized title. “The System” is pretty nicely funkified piece of social commentary, including Merl’s early ecological interest (cf. “Save Mother Earth”). This version has (some of) the vocals. I cannot remember if others do. My sense is that at least some versions they played are instrumental, but I’d have to check. “Merl’s Tune”, finally, is most readily accessed through the Garcia/Saunders/Kahn/Vitt “Live at the Keystone, volume 1” release (Fantasy FCD 7701-2, 1988), a version which was played five days after this one. This one is interesting because the tune is only the barest skeleton for what they actually do. In fact, they never really play the swooping intro followed by the carnival swirl that starts off the album version. Really, there’s just Merl playing the organ line and the rest of the band playing around it. And the “Merl’s Tune” theme pops up all the way to the end of of the “collective improvisation” (i.e., jam) that follows it. In other words, it would be just as plausible to have that all tracked together and to think of it as a 25+ minute version of Merl’s Tune. Goodness only knows what we miss at the fade-out, though as I note below it’s probably not a huge amount of material.
! Personnel: There is a trumpet player in set II who remains unidentified as of 6/26/2011. “sl halper” at deadnetcentral says this about him: “The trumpet player is almost certainly the same guy who’s on Pure Jerry 4; he pulls out all the same quotes and is especially heavy with his attempts to play John Coltrane’s Resolution over the jam on [Merl’s Tune].”
! R: s1t01 AM enters right into a nice deep groovy pocket. The vocals are a little low to start, levels come up a minute or so in, but this is a gorgeous, glorious, full fat Betty Cantor-Jackson recording. Thank you, Betty. And thank you, RE, for rescuing this incredible document from the muck and filth. There remain occasional ticks and crackles. I think we can handle them!
! s1t01 after son, off-mic talk: JG something like “Let’s do ‘It’s Too Late’.” Then someone suggests something else (presumably “Someday Baby”) and JG says “OK. Is that B-flat?”
! P: s1t03 @ 8:07-8:20 Merl starts playing around with a synthesizer, which he is working more fully in the 9:15 until 9:45, when he returns to organ. The song gets pretty well out there. The last 45 seconds of the track involve some pretty nice interplay.
! s1t05 “The System” is a nicely funkified number. This version has vocals. Do they all?
! s1t06 (1) JG: “Thanks a lot. We’re gonna take a break, we’ll be back in a little while.”
! s2t01 (2) @ 13:38, unidentified band member: “Can the waitress bring up some beer and water please?”
! s2t02 MFV Merl comes in with some synth @ 16:40.
! If tracking for CD layout, original seed splits set II between Money Honey and Like A Road.
! s2t05 the trumpet player lays out for most of “Like a Road”, coming in for just the last measure, around 8:45.
! s2t06 Merl’s Tune is interesting, because they hit the theme a number of times, but they never really fall into the full-fledged song. @ 14:47 for about 15 seconds, then again @ 15:24, trumpeter quotes Coltrane’s “Resolution”.
! s2t07 has traditionally been listed as “Instrumental”, and at one point I just renamed it “untitled 19730705”, but it’s really just “jam” or, more pedantically, “collective improvisation”. @ ca 7:00 MS quotes “Merl’s Tune” again, while trumpeter quotes Coltrane’s “Resolution” again. And when it fades out it is very much in the “Merl’s Tune” space.
! s2t07 jam fades out. No idea what’s missing, but I doubt it’s an awful lot–this second set already clocks in at over 96 minutes, and they didn’t usually get too much longer than this, as far as we know, around this time. Maybe things were different at the Share than at the more commonly-played Keystone, of course, but we just can’t know.
! s2t08 JG: “Thanks a lot.”
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