Home New England & Tri-State Music Dark Star Orchestra Brings Late-70s Dead Set to Schenectady

Dark Star Orchestra Brings Late-70s Dead Set to Schenectady

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DARKSTARORCHESTRA 082224 SCHENECTADY ZAKRADICK IMG29
DARKSTARORCHESTRA 082224 SCHENECTADY ZAKRADICK IMG29

Dead & Co’s residency at the Sphere in Vegas may be over for now, but the music of the Grateful Dead most certainly hasn’t faded away from concert stages across the country as myriad tribute, cover, and legacy acts continue to perform in the final weeks of summer.

Dark Star Orchestra may well be the best Dead-music band that is currently touring, and the 1,500-plus dancing heads at Schenectady’s Frog Alley on Thursday, August 22 seemed to be in agreement that DSO are venerable interpreters of the genre.

Dark star orchestra

DSO’s faithful and sequential recreations of notable Grateful Dead setlists and their dedication to performing with period-authentic instruments and equipment set them far apart from typical tribute acts. This is as close as you’re going to get to a late-70s Dead set, short of a time machine.

Thursday’s DSO show featured The Grateful Dead’s 5-5-78 setlist, originally performed in Thompson Arena at Dartmouth College. The two sets were relatively typical of the era, as the Dead balanced Chuck Berry rock with pastoral psychedelia, Americana, jazz-rock, balladry, and an occasional disco groove in the rhythm section. 

DSO also played a 1978 show at the Adirondack Independence Music Festival last year up in Lake George. I was hip to the fact that Thursday’s show was going to mine late-70s territory as soon as Jeff Mattson (who plays the Jerry Garcia role in DSO) strapped on his Travis Bean guitar – the same model Jerry played in 1976 and 1977 (he was playing Wolf by ‘78). Mattson was in fine form all night, faithfully modeling his tone and soloing techniques on Garcia’s.

The show opened with “Promised Land”, which featured the outstanding vocals of Rob Eaton, who just embodies the bandleader and rhythm guitar rocker Bob Weir became in the later 70s and throughout the 80s for the Dead. It’s also delightful to hear that vintage Ibanez rhythm guitar tone. I love Ace, but I’m not crazy about the wild trebly, metallic guitar tone he uses in Dead & Co.

“Dire Wolf” may have been the biggest singalong number of the night and “Cassidy” was the first where the band’s slinky contrapuntal interplay was on full display. DSO, much like the original Dead is a true ensemble, and the collective improvisation of Mattson, Eaton, and keyboardist Rob Barraco stood out on this Weir/Barlow classic.

Other highlights of the first set included “Candyman” from American Beauty, and a top-notch “They Love Each Other” that featured solos by both Mattson and Barraco. And while this reviewer might prefer “Brown-Eyed Women” to “Lazy Lightnin’/Supplication” it was this latter medley that ended the first set with one of the best jams of the entire night.

The second set kicked off with a duo of good-time rockers (“Bertha” and “Good Lovin’”) and then the first of two second-set Jerry ballads, a faithful rendition of “Ship of Fools”. 

It was the Estimated > Eyes, though, that was the hightlight of the entire show. Eaton nailed the Weir vocals on “Estimated Prophet” while Mattson dialed up the Mu-Tron to great effect. “Eyes of the World” remains one of the superlative Dead vehicles in terms of the song’s jam possibilities and also in the way that the elegantly jazz-leaning chord progression matches the beauty of the lyrics. Mattson seems to be at his best when he really leans into the jazzy elements of Garcia’s playing. Bassist Skip Vangelas (who was excellent, clear, and loud all night in his Phil-role) was also featured in “Eyes” and took a melodic solo.

I’ll admit that these days I’m all-in on the Dead & Co “Drums/Space” in large part because of Mickey Hart’s beam and use of electronics. For me, it’s never a bathroom break opportunity. DSO drummers Dino English and Rob Koritz reminded me that a more analog version of drums isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Koritz’s use of steel drum and a crew of roadies on various percussion instruments coupled nicely with English’s kit playing. Mattson and Barraco then took the stage for a very short “Space” that left me wanting more. While John Meyer certainly might have more “chops” than Mattson, I’ll take the ole Zen Trickster Mattson over Meyer on “Space” any day of the week. Mattson wore a rad purple John Coltrane t-shirt at the show, and his otherworldly “Close-Encounters”-tease into “space-jazz-rock” certainly paid homage to Coltrane’s later free era. Give me 10 more minutes of that next time, Jeff!

“Not Fade Away” was a great reminder that bands like DSO are carrying the torch so that new generations will hear this very vital and living music, and “Stella Blue” featured some of Mattson’s finest vocals of the evening on one of the Dead’s most sensitive ballads. The set closed with a rockin’ “Around and Around” which put Eaton back in the role of showman extraordinaire. 

The encores were particularly fun covers. Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London” had what remained of the weeknight crowd howling at the moon. The Dead set was complete, but DSO had a few more minutes until curfew, so the band went off-script and launched into The Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” finally giving backing vocalist Lisa Mackey a chance to take the lead. Mackey is in many ways the heart and soul of DSO. Her dancing, energy, and excellent harmony vocals are always a pleasure to watch, so it was particularly uplifting to hear her crush the Grace Slick part. Let Lisa sing!  

Summer may be coming to a close, but that just means that it’s time to start planning for fall and winter indoor shows. Dark Star Orchestra has many shows planned around the state this fall and just announced that they are returning to the legendary Capitol Theatre in Port Chester for a New Year’s run on December 30 and December 31. They’re sure to keep the Dead alive in 2025 too.

A word or two about the Frog Alley venue, since this is still a relatively new Capital Region venue. The place has great beer (I tried a Kolsch that paired nicely with a cool summer night), they have a wealth of food truck options, and the raised stage means most vantage points are good ones. There’s also a VIP option which gives you deluxe bathroom access, tent access, and balcony options, which looked particularly nice if  you got there early to grab seating. The sound was also stellar (and I give some of the credit to DSO’s own board operator because the mix was superb). My only gripe at all is that GA concertgoers had to wait in relatively long lines for the porta potties and hopefully more can be added to future events of this capacity. Parking wasn’t bad if you got there early enough and I was on the road and out of town in a jiffy. Definitely looking forward to getting back to Frog Alley for Band of Horses/City + Colour on Friday, September 13. 

Finally, I have to give an honorable mention to the dude in front of me who had the best shirt of the night. His maroon and white “Stealie’s Shops” shirt in Stewart’s Shop typography has to be about the best Capital Region-specific Shakedown shirts I’ve ever seen. I want one! 

Dark Star Orchestra | August 22, 2024 | Frog Alley Summer Stage | Schenectady, NY

Set I: Promised Land, Dire Wolf, Cassidy, Candyman, El Paso, They Love Each Other, Passenger, Brown Eyed Women, Lazy Lightnin’, Supplication.

Set II: Bertha, Good Lovin’, Ship of Fools, Estimated Prophet, Eyes of the World, Drums > Space, Not Fade Away, Stella Blue, Around and Around.

Encore: Werewolves of London, White Rabbit *

* Not part of the original Grateful Dead show on 5-5-78.

photos by Zak Radick

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Source: NYSmusic.com