• AARP Jukebox
  • Tour the Country with Tony Bennett
  • What is your music IQ?

More Music

Music

This blogger, Richard Gehr, is not an employee of AARP. The opinions expressed in the blog are not necessarily the opinions of AARP and AARP assumes no liability for the content posted by Mr. Gehr or any other participant

With his white gold-rush beard and supersized 'stache, Bob Weir currently resembles a cross between Merle Haggard and the Smith Brothers. Except for the shorts and sandals, of course; onstage at the Beacon Theatre in New York Friday night, where he was performing the second of three shows with his 11-year-old band, Ratdog, Weir was the first man I'd seen wearing shorts in several weeks. And because has hasn't been the cute Grateful Dead member for a while, it's both disconcerting and kind of cool to see a thoroughly seasoned musician play satisfying and often sophisticated rock while dressed like a second grader.

These days Ratdog is the looser-goosier of the Grateful Dead's two primary spin-off bands. While bassist Phil Lesh curates his Phil and Friends shows like a German conductor, barking instructions into the ear monitors of his temporary sidemen, Ratdog is a laid-back, loose-vibed, but no less musically ambitious version of a Dead repertory group. And why shouldn't Weir play the Dead's music, having written a substantial chunk of it?

Friday night began with "Truckin'" and concluded with heartbreaking a cappella encore version of "Attics of My Life." In-between we heard more or less familiar versions of "Playin' in the Band," "Tennessee Jed," and "Foolish Heart." Lead guitarist Mark Karan sounds remarkably like Jerry Garcia at his most buoyant while saxophonist Kenny Brooks kept things jazzy and conversational. The rest of the band remained solidly on the same improvisatory page for nearly three and a half hours of loose-limbed playing. For better or worse, they're the best Dead cover band around.

Beyond being one of the world's most inventive rhythm guitarists, Weir continues to write great new material at something of a snail's pace. Dark and moody as they were, "Even So" and "October Queen" were arguably the show's highlights. With lyrics like "I wish you were naked/ I wish you were wholesome and sincere" ("Even So"), they were written from the points of view of a couple of men who seem outside of their respective elements due to the demands of desire. Not unlike, say, a sixtyish California dude in shorts and sandals laying down venerable acid-rock truth in the middle of a New York winter.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Disclaimer: You are fully responsible for the content that you post, and AARP assumes no responsibility for the messages or content of others. We also reserve the right to remove or edit postings because of length or other reasons in our sole discretion. Please do not post commercial messages. Please behave respectfully to other members of this blog community. We reserve the right to delete or edit comments that may be inflammatory, abusive, off-topic, obscene, sexually explicit, use excessive foul language, are of a personal nature, or are otherwise inappropriate. You agree that AARP, its affiliates and sublicensees can use your comment and derivative works based on your comment on this blog and in any other media. Please do not post personal contact information and do not impersonate other members of this blog community or anyone else. We reserve the right to change these rules at any time.