July 11, 2020

You Can Hear the Pennywhistle Blow

Here’s a short post, just a few words to accompany the new podcast on ‘Uncle John’s Band’ –

The Pennywhistlers were a group of American women whose specialty was uncannily-accurate renditions of Eastern European choral folk songs. Folklorist Ethel Raim formed the group with her friends in 1962, with the goal of bringing the traditional music of other cultures to American listeners. They became relatively popular in folk-music circles during the ‘60s and frequently performed at folk festivals and on radio programs, singing mostly unaccompanied Balkan, Slavic and Yiddish songs (though they’d throw in some American folk tunes as well). 

 
They released a few albums:
“The Pennywhistlers” (Folkways, 1963) (Reissued on Verve in 1966 as “Songs from Everywhere.”)
“Folksongs of Eastern Europe” (Nonesuch, 1966) (The whole album was on youtube last month, but has been taken down. Not on CD.)
“A Cool Day and Crooked Corn” (Nonesuch, 1968) (A more subdued effort, also not on youtube or on CD.)

In his autobiography, folksinger Theodore Bikel mentioned “a group of seven women from the New York area who were known as the Pennywhistlers. They had been organized by Ethel Raim and specialized in Eastern European choral or group songs, sung mostly a cappella… These women were the closest to the real thing in authenticity in the United States, a tribute to good musicianship and a good ear.”

In her quest for authenticity, Raim traveled to Bulgaria in 1965 to see the national folk festival there and pick up material in person. (She would later do field recordings of Bulgarian singers, including this track sent into space on the Voyager record.) Since she didn’t know the language, when learning Bulgarian folksongs Raim would transcribe the syllables, then ask a Bulgarian speaker to figure out the words. Her efforts paid off in the very authentic-sounding singing styles on the Pennywhistlers' albums.
Here’s one recent interview with her:

At some point, Jerry Garcia heard of the Pennywhistlers and their versions of Balkan traditional songs. All through the ‘60s, Garcia had an interest in folk singers from different traditions, whether it be old whaling shanties, gospel quartets, Bahamian spirituals, or the Georgia Sea Island Singers:

Along with many other people, he was particularly enchanted by Bulgarian singing. When Garcia & Phil Lesh were guest hosts on KMPX in April ’67, Garcia introduced a song from “the Bulgarian folklore scene,” praising the “unaccompanied two-part singing…just the weirdest intervals you ever heard.”  
This track was from the 1966 “Music of Bulgaria” album on the Nonesuch label, done by the Ensemble of the Bulgarian Republic (with Philip Koutev directing). Rhoney Gissen reports that Owsley also loved the "Bulgarian Women's Choir" album, and they would play it at his house ("Jerry loved that"). Another fan of the album was David Crosby, who praises it to this day.

This album was occasionally played on KMPX; the DJ mentioned that “we played some of this on the air here, because a lot of people reacted very favorably to it. It’s a great sound to listen to.” In the US, the Koutev Bulgarian National Ensemble could also be heard on the very similar album “Bulgaria's Great Women's Voices” (Monitor, 1963); other more academic Bulgarian folkloric-music albums available in the '60s were “Folk Music of Bulgaria” (collected by A.L. Lloyd on Topic Records, 1964), and Alan Lomax & A.L. Lloyd’s “Bulgaria” collection in the Columbia World Library of Folk & Primitive Music series (1959). (Many more well-known albums of Bulgarian female vocal choirs would be released in later decades.)
How many of these (or other collections) Garcia heard besides Koutev’s ensemble, I don’t know. But his interest continued in later years - one person reported "seeing Garcia at the Bulgarian female choir show at the Berkeley Community Theater in 1988, along with Grace Slick and David Crosby." (This was the Bulgarian State Female Vocal Choir concert on 11/18/88, a sold-out show with a thrilled audience.)




Anyway, sometime in fall 1969, Garcia put on the Pennywhistlers’ “Folksongs of Eastern Europe” album, and ‘Shto Mi e Milo’ was the first song he heard:

Interviewed by Blair Jackson in 1991, Garcia remembered the moment well:
“I was listening to records of the Bulgarian Women’s Choir, and also this Greek-Macedonian music, these Pennywhistlers, and on one of those records there was a song that featured this little turn of melody that was so lovely that I thought, ‘Gee, if I could get this into a song it would be so great.’ So I stole it. [Laughs.] Actually, I only took a little piece of the melody, so I can’t say I plagiarized the whole thing. Of course it became so transmogrified when Bob and Phil added their harmony parts to it that it really was no longer the part of the song that was special for me. That was the melodic kicker originally, though.” (Goin’ Down the Road, p.222

A brief song history of ‘Shto Mi e Milo’ is here: 
It’s a traditional song from Macedonia (also claimed by neighboring Bulgaria) – I couldn’t find its age, but it's frequently performed: there’s a recording as early as 1908. (It’s a rather popular song for women’s choirs to sing, with plenty of videos available.) 
I think the Pennywhistlers' version was its first appearance on an American album; it's listed as a Macedonian song (as Garcia recalled), and perhaps was one of the fruits of Ethel Raim's field trip to the Balkans.

The Pennywhistlers also sang the song in Pete Seeger’s 1966 “Rainbow Quest” TV show:
The melodic bit that caught Garcia’s ear would later become the line, “Whoa-oh, what I want to know…” This was a surprise to me. I had thought that a catchy bit like the “Come hear Uncle John’s Band” riff or the initial verse line would have been the first inspiration for the song, but no, it was a twisting little melody that he’d use to awkwardly round out the verse – not the most obvious hook in the song. (It’s possible this wasn’t the only song to fire his imagination – for instance another Macedonian song, ‘Iz Dolu’ on the Pennywhistler’s “Cool Day” album, seems to have some melodic resemblance to the Uncle John’s verse, though that could just be a coincidence or my imagination.)

Once Garcia had put together the instrumental skeleton of the song, he and the Dead jammed on it at length as a loud blazing rock tune, trying out different variations. At this point the lumbering 7/8 riff in the song had become a prominent feature, repeated over and over at beginning and end. They made a rough tape of their rehearsal and gave it to Robert Hunter to write lyrics for the song. 
Hunter recalled, “That came from a tape that the band made of a tune of Jerry’s. They had the whole tune together, drums and everything – in fact I still have that tape – and I played it over and over and tried writing to it. I kept hearing the words ‘God damn, Uncle John’s mad,’ and it took a while for that to turn into ‘Come hear Uncle John’s band’…” (Goin’ Down the Road, p.222)

Meanwhile, Garcia didn’t even wait for Hunter to finish the words before he started showing off his new tune at Dead shows. It appeared as an instrumental jam at three shows in early November ’69 – in the Alligator jam on 11/1:
in the Dark Star on 11/7:
and in Dark Star again on 11/8:

Hunter finished the lyrics later that month, and the Dead worked up a singing arrangement. Garcia would later tell Rolling Stone, “Uncle John’s Band was a major effort as a musical piece. It’s one we worked on for a really long time to get it working right.” (Signpost p.70) Perhaps under the influence of Crosby Stills & Nash, the song was now filled with group harmonies. (Garcia later mentioned, “They never actually worked with us, [but] having them around and sitting down and singing with acoustic guitars was such a turn-on for us that we just got into it.”) Ironically, the song first inspired by a choral folk tune had moved through a fast-paced blasting rock phase and then become a gentle calypso-flavored choral folk tune again.

After some practice the Dead were ready to debut the finished song on 12/4/69, closing a show at the Fillmore West:
The band introduced the song with a disclaimer: “Well, seems we blew most of the set just trying to remember how to play, so we’re gonna blow this part of the set remembering how to sing a song that we just learned how to do – we just barely know it, we’re gonna just try it though. What the hell.”
There are no instrumental elaborations yet, but vocally the song is pretty much complete. The performance is understandably tentative – they're uncertain how to end the song, so after some audible confusion they end it by repeating the first verse.

The next performance on 12/12 is much more solid, with extended soloing – there’s a lovely moment at the end where Garcia, stuck for a verse, just “la-de-da’s” his way through it and dives into another jam. (Then they segue into a brief Friend of Mine.)
They rehearsed the song some more that week, and by the next performance on 12/19 they have the song down and the ending is finalized (though there’s no jamming).
On 12/26 they easily adapt the song to an acoustic format, where it works perfectly in the most charming performance yet:

From there, the song’s progress to album is briefly told. After only about 14 more live performances, the Dead were ready to record the song, and quickly wrapped it up in their studio sessions in early March 1970. They picked it as the first song on the Workingman’s Dead album, and also selected it to be the single. (Phil commented, “Uncle John’s Band was picked because it was obvious.”) Warner Bros. felt it was too long and profane for airplay, so an edited version went out to stations, trimmed for AM listeners:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg7jlrs4ioQ (in mono and profanity-free for radio play)
Afterwards, Garcia groaned about the single: “I gave them instructions on how to properly edit it, and they garbled it so completely and we didn’t get a chance to hear it until way late, and it was…oh fuck, what an atrocity.” 
Weir complained about it, too: "I wasn't pleased - they hacked it to ribbons. It was absolutely necessary, everything they did, but we should just never have tried it. It didn't get us all that much exposure."

 

Nonetheless, the single did well – while their previous singles like ‘Dark Star’ had flopped and disappeared without a trace, Uncle John’s made it to the top 100 and found plenty of listeners. Garcia claimed, “I have no interest about singles so I don’t want to bother about it… It would be nice to have a single, but a hit single usually means 12-year-old audiences.”
12-year-olds remained rare at Dead shows, but the crowds trying to get in soon swelled to unmanageable size as the Dead experienced the first pangs of success. Garcia may not have admitted it, but the influence of folk music on his songwriting had played a small part in making him a rock star. 
(“If I could get this into a song it would be so great…”)

As for the Pennywhistlers, they might never have heard of the Grateful Dead, but they probably could have sung Uncle John’s Band better than the Dead did!
And as for actual pennywhistles blowing…the Dead didn’t use them, but a slide-whistle did make a memorable appearance in one of the shows where Uncle John’s was introduced, playing the national anthem  

*

APPENDIX – PENNYWHISTLER PRESS 

Though not a very well-known group outside folk circles, the Pennywhistlers received some positive notice in the press. The Boston Globe called them “a group of women who sing music from the Balkans with magnificent verve and musicianship.” (8/27/67) 
The Globe also reported on the 1968 Newport folk festival: “The Pennywhistlers, who don’t whistle at all, but are a well-disciplined choral group of seven girls, did a series of Slavic-Balkan songs.” (7/27/68) 
The Chicago Tribune, reviewing Songs From Everywhere: “The seven American girls who make up the Pennywhistlers have remarkably acute ears, both for the sound shades of language and the pitches which make music… They are real experts.” (12/18/66) 

The longest article I found came from the Kingston Daily Freeman, NY, 8/17/68: 

“7 PENNYWHISTLERS

On August 20, the Woodstock Playhouse Tuesday Folk Concert Series will present the Pennywhistlers, seven young women, who although born in the U.S., have a great love for the music of the Danube, Russia, and the Slavic lands. They bring to their audiences the intricate rhythms, earthy vocal qualities, and engaging harmonies of the peasant music of Eastern Europe. True to their heritages, they also sing Yiddish – all are from Jewish families and can speak Yiddish – as well as American traditional and contemporary songs. 
The Pennywhistlers have appeared on campuses across the country, at Lewisohn Stadium, Philadelphia and Newport Folk Festivals; come to Woodstock direct from their appearance at this year’s Newport Festival. They have also performed on TV and radio and have recorded on the Folkways and Nonesuch labels. Concerts at Carnegie and Town Halls led the New York Times to call their recital “brilliant and surprising, polished and joyous… A good deal of the group’s material is drawn from the glorious folk-choral tradition of Eastern Europe, laced with athletic leaps, wild harmonies, dissonances, rough edges and surprising intervals… Not only is the material completely fresh and appealing, but the performances were equal to the repertory.” 
For an evening of pure enjoyment, the Woodstock Playhouse is the place to be next Tuesday night. There you’ll hear Bulgarian planting songs (the group’s director, Ethel Raim, recently returned from a research trip to Bulgaria and Eastern Europe), Hungarian live lyrics, and Croatian hymns, “many of them sung a capella – sustained by the septet’s own strong harmony,” according to a Time magazine review. 
Francine Brown, Shelley Cook, Joyce Gluck, Alice Kogan, Deborah Lesser, Ethel Raim, and Dina Silberman make up The Pennywhistlers. They are being hailed as one of the most exciting singing groups to come along in years and they’ll be at the Woodstock Playhouse for one night only, Tuesday, Aug. 20 at 8:40 p.m.”

June 13, 2020

Dark Star Graph


 Dark Star Graph (downloadable as an image)


DARK STAR TIMINGS

1/17/68intro /1:05 – verse 1 – jam 1:36 – verse 2 (4:49)
1/20/68intro 2:38 – verse 1// (3:08/)
1/26/68intro 1:33 – verse 1 – jam 1:52 – verse 2 (5:36)  
1/27/68intro 2:18 – verse 1 – jam 2:38 – verse 2 (7:06)
2/2/68intro 1:52 – verse 1 – jam 2:03 – verse 2 (6:33)
2/3/68intro 1:30 – verse 1 – jam 1:40 – verse 2 (5:22)
2/14/68intro 1:44 – verse 1 – jam 2:00 – verse 2 (5:53)
2/22/68intro /1:36 – verse 1 – jam 2:37 – verse 2 (6:25)
2/23/68intro 2:14 – verse 1 – jam 2:18 – verse 2 (6:49)   
3/16/68intro 1:49 – verse 1 – jam 3:15 – verse 2 (7:15)
3/29/68intro 2:14 – verse 1 –jam 2:48 – verse 2 (7:28)
3/30/68intro 2:48 – verse 1 – jam 3:50 – verse 2 (8:59)
6/xx/68intro 4:52 – verse 1 – jam 9:16 – verse 2 (16:06)
8/21/68intro 3:51 – verse 1 – jam 8:10 – verse 2 (14:30)
8/22/68intro 2:56 – verse 1 – jam 6:43 – verse 2 (12:07)
8/23/68intro 5:33 – verse 1 – jam 7:30 – verse 2 (15:28)
8/24/68intro 1:32 – verse 1 – jam 7:23 – verse 2 (11:20)  
8/28/68intro 2:02 – verse 1 – jam 6:25 – verse 2 (10:49)
9/2/68intro 5:00 – verse 1 – jam 6:50 – verse 2 (14:06)
10/12/68intro 4:15 – verse 1 – jam 8:30 – verse 2 (15:00)
10/13/68intro /2:38 – verse 1 – jam 8:53 – verse 2 (13:53)
10/20/68intro /3:00 – verse 1 – jam 5:05 – verse 2 (10:17) 
11/1/68intro 2:50 – verse 1 – jam 7:00 – verse 2 (12:17)
11/6/68intro /5:10 – verse 1 – jam 4:50 – verse 2 (12:20) (studio rehearsal)
11/22/68intro /2:39 – verse 1 – jam 7:15 – verse 2 (11:52)
12/7/68intro /3:20 – verse 1 – jam 7:40 – verse 2 (13:26)
12/29/68intro 3:00 – verse 1 – jam 5:03 – verse 2 (10:25)

1/17/69intro 4:35 – verse 1 – jam 6:03 – verse 2 (13:09)
1/24/69intro 7:12 – verse 1 – jam 9:21 – verse 2 (19:38)
1/25/69intro /3:39 – verse 1 – jam 8:10 – verse 2 (14:06)
1/26/69intro 4:05 – verse 1 – jam 3:10// - verse 2 (9:38)
2/2/69intro 4:37 – verse 1 – jam 8:35 – verse 2 (15:38)
2/4/69intro 3:39 – verse 1 – jam 7:14 – verse 2 (13:13)
2/5/69intro /2:10 – verse 1 – jam 7:04 – verse 2 (11:41)
2/6/69intro 4:33 – verse 1 – jam 7:06/ - verse 2 (14:02)  
2/7/69intro 4:30 – verse 1 – jam 7:10 – verse 2 (14:07)  
2/11/69intro 3:12 – verse 1 – jam 6:45 – verse 2 (12:29)  
2/12/69jam //3:24 – verse 2 (/4:59)
2/14/69intro /5:34 – verse 1 – jam 10:46 – verse 2 (19:03)
2/15/69intro 4:08 – verse 1 – jam 15:37 – verse 2 (22:19)  
2/21/69intro 7:27 – verse 1 – jam 10:33 – verse 2 (20:38)
2/22/69intro 6:54 – verse 1 – jam 12:55 – verse 2 (22:19)
2/27/69intro 4:46 – verse 1 – jam 14:28 – verse 2 (21:44)
2/28/69intro 3:57 – verse 1 – jam 13:25 – verse 2 (19:47)  
3/1/69intro 7:40 – verse 1 – jam 12:55 – verse 2 (23:01)
3/2/69intro 5:07 – verse 1 – jam 12:25 – verse 2 (20:03)  
3/15/69intro 6:17 – verse 1 – jam 11:35 – verse 2 (20:30)
3/22/69intro 2:21 – verse 1 – jam 10:00 – verse 2 (14:47)  
3/28/69intro 5:56 – verse 1 – jam 14:14 – verse 2 (22:46)
3/29/69intro 5:38 – verse 1 – jam 13:00 – verse 2 (21:01)
4/4/69intro 5:21 – verse 1 – jam 12:15 – verse 2 (20:03)  
4/5/69intro 3:55 – verse 1 – jam 11:04 – verse 2 (17:27)
4/11/69intro 4:29 – verse 1 – jam 12:55 – verse 2 (19:59)
4/12/69intro /2:35 – verse 1 – jam 16:28 – verse 2 (21:35)
4/13/69intro 7:50 – verse 1 – jam 13:40 – verse 2 (23:56)
4/15/69intro 6:55 – verse 1 – jam 11:00 – verse 2 (20:21)
4/17/69intro 7:20 – verse 1 – jam 11:40 – verse 2 (21:35)
4/20/69intro 6:28 – verse 1 – jam 12:13 – verse 2 (21:13)
4/21/69intro 5:20 – verse 1 – jam 14:50 – verse 2 (22:41) 
4/22/69intro 8:54 – verse 1 – jam 16:00/ - verse 2 (27:21)
4/23/69intro 6:39 – verse 1 – jam 11:47 – verse 2 (20:56)
4/27/69intro 9:00 – verse 1 – jam 14:50 – verse 2 (26:31)
5/7/69intro 5:48 – verse 1 – jam 15:30 [ - drums] (22:18)
5/10/69intro 5:05 – verse 1 – jam 13:10 – verse 2 (20:56)
5/23/69intro 6:49 – verse 1 – jam 9:38 – verse 2 (18:58)
5/30/69intro 4:30 – verse 1 – jam 11:35 (17:03)
5/31/69intro 7:26 – verse 1 – jam 13:56 – verse 2 (23:53)
6/5/69intro 6:55 – verse 1 – jam 11:10 – verse 2 (20:32)
6/7/69intro 5:03 – verse 1 – jam 13:25 – verse 2 (20:51)  
6/14/69intro 4:28 – verse 1 – jam 8:13 – verse 2 (15:11)
6/21/69intro 2:42 – verse 1 – jam 2:00/ - verse 2 (7:21)
6/22/69intro /7:20 – verse 1 – jam 3:03 (11:26)
6/27/69intro 7:33 – verse 1 – jam 15:55 – verse 2 (26:07)  
7/5/69intro 3:50 – verse 1 – jam 11:45 – verse 2 (18:19)
7/7/69intro 13:02 – verse 1 – jam 11:10 – verse 2 (26:50)
7/12/69jam //9:48 (/9:48)
8/3/69intro 12:37 – verse 1 – jam 8:05 – verse 2 (23:20)
8/16/69intro 8:20 – verse 1 – jam 9:45 (19:06)
8/21/69intro :17 – verse 1 – jam 3:48 – verse 2 (6:33)
8/23/69intro 11:45/ - [verse 1] – jam /13:30 – verse 2 (26:57)
8/30/69intro 7:05 – verse 1 – jam 18:55 – verse 2 (28:51)
9/1/69intro 4:51 – verse 1 – jam 10:06 – verse 2 (17:39)
9/26/69intro /3:34 – verse 1 – jam 10:37 – verse 2 (16:50)
10/25/69intro 6:57 – verse 1 – jam 12:28 – verse 2 (22:02)
11/2/69intro 9:18 – verse 1 – jam 18:12 – verse 2 (30:07)
11/7/69intro 5:48 – verse 1 – jam* 17/30 – verse 2 (26:00)  (*includes Uncle John’s jam)
11/8/69intro 5:22 – verse 1 – jam 7:34 OTHER ONE (12:00)jam* 5:05 – verse 2 (21:03)  (*includes Uncle John’s jam)
12/4/69intro 13:45 – verse 1 – jam 13:43 – verse 2 (30:14)
12/11/69intro 3:35 – verse 1 – jam 14:16 – verse 2 (20:32)
12/20/69intro 5:02 – verse 1 – jam 12:57 – verse 2 (20:38)
12/26/69intro 6:08 – verse 1 – jam 16:01 – verse 2/ (24:00)
12/30/69intro 7:02 – verse 1 – jam 11:20/ - [verse 2?] (19:23)

1/2/70intro 6:52 – verse 1 – jam 21:36 – verse 2 (31:30)
1/17/70intro 3:39 – verse 1 – jam 13:50 – verse 2 (20:00)
1/23/70intro 4:28 – verse 1 – jam 11:41 – verse 2 (18:43)
2/2/70intro 5:16 – verse 1 – jam 13:55 – verse 2 (21:52)
2/8/70intro 6:21 – verse 1 – jam 17:01 – verse 2 (26:11)
2/11/70intro 16:19 Spanish Jam 9:40 (25:59)
2/13/70intro 8:50 – verse 1 – jam 17:48 – verse 2 (29:24) 
2/14/70intro 4:34 – verse 1 – jam 16:17 – verse 2 (23:37)
3/23/70intro 4:42/ - [verse 1] – jam /9:00 (13:42) 
4/25/70intro 6:32 – verse 1 – jam 15:26 – verse 2 (24:39)
5/8/70intro /1:13 – verse 1 – jam 15:49 (18:05)
5/15/70intro 3:01 – verse 1 – jam 13:54 – verse 2 (19:37) 
5/24/70intro 5:16 – verse 1 – jam 13:35 – verse 2 (21:22)  
6/24/70intro 6:15 – verse 1 – jam 2:25ATTICS (6:35) jam 7:09 SUGAR MAGNOLIA (2:30)jam 1:29 – verse 2 (19:57)
9/17/70intro 4:08 – verse 1 – jam 19:40 – verse 2 (26:30)
9/19/70intro 6:35 – verse 1 – jam 16:05 – verse 2 (25:24)
10/11/70intro /4:08 – verse 1 – jam 13:48 – verse 2 (20:29)
10/17/70intro 3:12/ - verse 1 – jam 14:26/ - verse 2 (19:17)
11/5/70intro 4:34 – verse 1 – jam 13:55 – verse 2 (21:06)
11/8/70intro 6:42 – verse 1 – jam 8:45 Main Ten 8:42 (25:19)

2/18/71intro 3:26 – verse 1 – jam 2:38 WHARF RAT (7:20) jam 5:50 – verse 2 (14:21)
4/8/71intro 4:27 – verse 1 – jam 7/53 – verse 2 (14:35)
4/26/71intro 5:42 – verse 1 – jam 6:05 (12:52)
4/28/71intro 3:30 – verse 1 – jam 7:51 – verse 2 (14:00)
7/31/71intro 9:40 – verse 1 – jam 11:40 (22:35) 
10/21/71intro 6:35 – verse 1 – jam 7:13 SITTIN’ (3:20)jam :29 – verse 2 (17:09)
10/24/71intro 7:15 – verse 1 – jam 10:40 – verse 2 (20:49)
10/31/71intro 7:18 – verse 1 – jam 14:47 (23:14)
11/7/71intro 8:06 – verse 1 – jam 4:45 [ - drums] (14:00)
11/15/71intro 7:04 – verse 1 – jam 4:40 EL PASO (4:57) jam 7:49 (20:44)
12/5/71intro 8:01 UNCLE (2:49)jam 12:16 (20:17)
12/15/71intro 10:05 – verse 1 – jam 9:07 (20:23)

3/23/72intro 4:40 – verse 1 – jam 15:27 – verse 2 (22:44)
4/8/72intro 10:56 – verse 1 – jam 19:20 (31:30)
4/14/72intro 16:46 – verse 1 – jam 11:19 (29:13)
4/17/72intro 9:48 – verse 1 – jam 20:00 (30:55)
4/24/72intro 11:07 – verse 1 – jam 13:23 UNCLE (3:23) jam 14:53 (40:38)
4/29/72 – *intro 14:40 – verse 1 – jam 14:07 (29:54)  [*preceded by 35-second drum intro]
5/4/72intro 12:25 – verse 1 – jam 5:46 drums 2:31 jam 15:55 – verse 2 (39:25)
5/7/72intro 15:05 – verse 1 – jam 3:10 [ - drums] (19:30)
5/11/72intro 13:45 drums 3:40 jam 5:25 – verse 1 – jam 23:07 (47:11)
5/18/72intro 12:49 – verse 1 – jam 12:26 (26:29)
5/23/72 – (tuning jam 1:36) – intro 11:00 bass/drums 2:05 jam 4:36 – verse 1 – jam 10:59 (29:33)
5/25/72intro 16:46 – verse 1 – jam 16:27 (34:30)
7/18/72intro 16:00 – verse 1 – jam 10:00 (27:13]
7/26/72intro 9:46 – verse 1 – jam 18:16 – verse 2 (30:49)
8/21/72intro 9:46 – verse 1 – jam 16:21 (27:25) [+El Paso (4:39)>space 3:44]
8/24/72intro 11:04 – verse 1 – jam 14:48 (27:09)
8/27/72intro 11:39 – verse 1 – jam 18:36 (31:27)
9/10/72intro 19:00 – verse 1 – jam 12:07 drums 1:33 jam 1:28 (35:20)
9/16/72intro 10:59 – verse 1 – jam 14:47 (26:59)
9/21/72intro 12:01 – verse 1 – jam 24:08 (37:21)
9/24/72intro 10:22 – verse 1 – jam 16:17 drums 1:59 jam 4:14 (33:56)
9/27/72intro 24:38 – verse 1 – jam 4:55 (30:49)
10/18/72 – [drums – ] intro 11:34 – verse 1 – jam* 15:32 (28:21)  (*includes Philo Stomp)
10/23/72intro 12:59 – verse 1 – jam 14:07 (28:23)
10/26/72intro 15:38 – verse 1 – jam 4:36 (21:32)
10/28/72intro 11:29 – verse 1 – jam* 15:00 (27:43)  (*includes Philo Stomp)
11/13/72intro 13:18 – verse 1 – jam* 19:18 (33:50)  (*includes Philo Stomp)
11/19/72intro 11:44 – verse 1 – bass/drums 8:28 jam 4:16 WRS Prelude Jam 6/00 (31:40)
11/26/72intro 10:27 – verse 1 – space/bass solo 5:00jam 8:31 (25:11)
12/11/72intro 16:48 – verse 1 – jam 16:17 (34:27)
12/15/72jam 14:25 – verse 1 – jam 9:15 (25:00)

2/15/73intro 13:01 – verse 1 – bass solo/jam 5:02 (19:17)
2/22/73intro 7:18 – verse 1 – jam 4:56 (13:30)
2/26/73intro 17:12 – verse 1 – jam 6:37 (25:05)
3/16/73intro 13:53 – verse 1 – jam 12:02 (27:13)
3/21/73 – (WRS Prelude 1:06) – intro 9:34 – verse 1 – jam 10:55 (21:44)
3/24/73Jam 22:30 intro 2:09 – verse 1 – jam :33 (4:00 or 26:30)
3/28/73 – (WRS Prelude 2:16) – intro 19:14 – verse 1 – jam 11:39 (32:08)
6/10/73intro 7:31 bass/drums 2:30jam 4:30 - verse 1 – jam 11:03 (26:34)
6/24/73intro* 15:55 – verse 1 – jam 10:05 (27:13)  (*80-second drum solo before the verse)
6/30/73intro 9:02 – verse 1 – jam 5:53 (16:10)
8/1/73intro 13:13 – verse 1 – jam 10:22 (24:50)
9/11/73intro 16:26 – verse 1 – jam/bass solo 4:33 (22:16)
10/19/73intro 12:16 – verse 1 – jam* 12:45 (26:20)  (*includes Mind Left Body jam)
10/25/73intro* 12:45 – verse 1 – jam 9/02 (23:02)  (*includes Mind Left Body jam)
10/30/73intro* 15:40 – verse 1 – jam 10:10 (27:07)  (*includes Mind Left Body jam)
11/11/73intro 16:33 – verse 1 – jam* 17:47 (35:38)  (*ends with Mind Left Body jam)
11/30/73jam 9:37
12/6/73tuning 2:06 intro 23:27 – verse 1 – jam 17:17 (44:07)
12/18/73intro* 11:15 – verse 1 – jam 9:07 [ - drums] (21:44)  (*includes Mind Left Body jam)

2/24/74intro 19:00 – verse 1 – jam 9:07 (29:37) 
5/14/74intro 12:46 – verse 1 – jam 12:38 (26:39)
6/23/74intro/jam 17:54Spanish Jam 4:10 (22:04)
7/25/74intro/jam 24:00  (*ends with Slipknot jam at 21m)
9/10/74intro 22:32 – verse 1 – jam 7:34 (31:18)
10/18/74 – [Seastones – drums] – Jam 7:47 intro 7:48 – verse 1 – jam 15:12 (31:58 or 24:11)

12/31/78intro 6:55 – verse 1 – jam 3:20 OTHER ONE (5:00) theme 1:00 (12:21)
1/10/79intro 8:59 – verse 1 – jam 8:10 (18:24)
1/20/79intro 3:58 – verse 1 – jam 4:09 (9:23)
12/31/81intro 3:58 – verse 1 – jam 8:12 – verse 2 (14:54)
7/13/84intro 1:23 – verse 1 – jam 10:56 – verse 2 – end jam 1:30 (15:54)

10/9/89intro 1:04 – verse 1 – jam 8:32 – verse 2 – space 7:35 (19:23)
10/16/89intro 5:34 – verse 1 – jam 5:03 (11:37) - ### [47m] – jam 3:49 – verse 2 & outro (5:24) (total 17:01)
10/26/89 – (prelude 1:15) – intro 2:11 – verse 1 – jam 10:50 – verse 2 – space 12:45 (27:59)  
12/31/89intro 6:42 – verse 1 – space 7:24 (15:05)

3/29/90intro 5:53 – verse 1 – space 11:15 (18:19) - #D/S# [17:50] - intro 1:32 – verse 2 (2:47) (total 21:06)
7/12/90intro 7:23 – verse 1 – jam/space 9:50 – verse 2 – jam 5:40 (24:55) 
9/20/90intro 6:20 – verse 1 – jam 4:38 PLAYING (4:42) jam 2:33 – verse 2 – space 11:31 (27:14)  
10/20/90intro 3:12 – verse 1 – space 8:48 (13:06) - #D/S# [16:30] - intro 1:50 – verse 2 – jam 1:40 (4:38) (total 17:44)
11/1/90intro 3:33 – verse 1 – jam 5:28 (10:10) - #D/S# [17:00] - intro :20 – verse 2 – space 9:33 (11:00) (total 21:10)
12/12/90intro 5:52 – verse 1 – jam 6:55 (13:47)
12/14/90intro 4:38 – verse 2 – jam 3:28 (9:10)
12/31/90intro 1:29 – verse 1 – jam 6:48 – verse 2 – space 10:05 (20:36)

4/1/91intro 8:46 – verse 1 – jam/space 13:50 (23:34) - #D/S# [16:50] - intro 1:40 – verse 2 (2:45) (total 26:19) 
6/14/91intro 1:57 – verse 1 – jam/space 7:55 (10:58)
6/22/91jam 7:30 (7:30)  [*inst. verse @1:00]
8/16/91 – (noodling 1:28) – intro 2:20 – verse 1 – jam 5:23 (10:12)  
9/10/91intro 3:39 – verse 1 – jam 7:44* (12:24) - #D/S# [12:40] - intro :29 – verse 2 – space 10:41 (12:16) (total 24:40)  [*inst. verse at end of pt. 1]
9/24/91intro 4:30 – verse 1 – jam 9:05 (14:40)
9/26/91 – (tuning jam 2:10) – intro 8:45 – verse 1 – jam 5:37 (15:27) - ### [47m] - intro :35 – verse 2 – jam 4:29 (6:13) (total 21:40)
10/31/91intro 3:46 – verse 1 – jam (w/recital) 5:38 (10:32) - #D/S# [27:20] - intro 1:20 – verse 2 – outro :50 (3:14) (total 13:46)

3/9/92intro 2:40 – verse 1 – jam 7:21 (11:03)
3/20/92intro 1:21 – verse 1 – jam 6:26 – inst. verse – jam 4:09 (14:13)  
6/8/92intro 1:08 – verse 1 – jam 6:40 (8:46)
6/18/92jam 6:00 (6:00)  [*inst verse @ 2:26]
6/22/92intro 2:52 – verse 2 (4:01)
12/12/92noodling/intro 2:56 – verse 1 – jam 9:00 (12:57) - #D/S# [17:00] – jam 4:35* (total 17:32) [*>Miracle jam 4:30 at end of Space]
12/16/92intro 2:32 – verse 2 – jam 3:41 (7:18)

3/17/93intro 2:26 – verse 1 – jam 6:48 (10:15)
6/23/93intro 2:29 – verse 1 – jam 2:57 (6:25)
9/13/93intro 3:17 – verse 1 – jam 1:11 (5:33)
9/22/93intro 1:59 – verse 1 – jam 4:40 (7:44)
3/16/94intro 4:30 – verse 1 – jam 5:52 (11:14)
3/30/94intro 4:48 – verse 1 – jam 4:40 (10:29)

1968 HARTBEATS
10/8/68 – jam 12:00
10/10/68 – jam 13:09
10/30/68a – jam 17:30
10/30/68b – jam 19:10/ (cut)
8/28/69 – jam 47/33
(On 8/28/69, Deadlists shows a return to Dark Star after the Eleven jam, but I disagree – they never come back to the theme.)

EARLY TEASES
4/26/69 – 1:37 (after Mountains)
11/21/73 – 3:26 (after El Paso)
6/28/74 – 3:30 (after Mind Left Body jam)
7/18/76 – 2:30 (after Let It Grow)

1991 TEASES
6/17/91 – 1:30 tease before Masterpiece – 1:15 tease before Truckin’ (inst. verse) – 3:35 tease out of UJB jam (w/ inst. verse – part of longer jam, timing is somewhat arbitrary)
6/28/91 – 1:32 (inst. verse in Wharf Rat)
8/17/91 – 1:20 (inst. verse in Space)
9/6/91 – 3:25 (inst. verse>jam out of Space)
9/8/91 – 9:05 (loose jam out of Saint, DS theme only hinted)


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The intent of this graph is to show the basic structure and evolution of Dark Star over time – basically, when and where are the verses played, and how long are the jams before and after the verse?

All Dark Stars were timed from scratch.
Timings are not exact – they may be off by at least several seconds.
Due to varying tape speeds, different copies of a Dark Star often have different timings (20 or 30 seconds apart isn’t unusual), but I tried to pick the best copy to time. The actual length of a Dark Star doesn’t always match its track time, which sometimes includes a stretch of tuning or dead air at the start.

/ indicates a cut.
## in the ‘90s shows indicates Drums/Space (and sometimes other songs) between the two parts of Dark Star.
This list was only made to show the timings for the graph, so the full song suites aren’t listed – my purpose here is only to look at Dark Star itself.  

The verses are just listed as ‘verse 1’ and ‘verse 2.’ I didn’t specifically time them, but they ranged from 50-75 seconds long (depending on the speed of the performance) – the average verse length was a minute. Dark Star almost always had a little 30-second outro played in 1968-71, which is included in ‘verse 2.’
I generally didn’t subdivide the jams, unless there was a notable bass or drum solo inside the Dark Star, or unless it ended with a distinct thematic jam that’s usually tracked separately. (A few major theme jams within Dark Star are noted, but not all – for a list of the Feelin’ Groovy and Soulful Strut jams in Dark Star, see this post.)

Note that some Dark Star dates have changed from the old familiar tape dates: "1/22 & 1/23/68" are actually 1/26 & 1/27/68; "3/24/70" is likely 3/23/70; and "4/24/70" is actually 4/25/70. "8/28/68" is also from some nearby date that week, but I left it since the actual date isn't known.

Not every Dark Star is on the main list. Some Dark Stars are structural outliers and I felt didn’t belong with the others: the Hartbeats jams of ’68, and the short instrumental teases over the years (especially in ’91). These range from the shortest Dark Star jams ever played (90 seconds), to the longest (a 47-minute Hartbeats behemoth). In any case, without the usual verse structure these would stick out on the graph, so I decided to list these separately at the end.

For a more complete Dark Star catalog and list of song transitions, see:


TIMING QUANDARIES

In the early years, drum solos inside Dark Star are included in the timing. But drum breaks at the end are considered separate and aren’t included (for example: 5/7/69, 11/7/71, 5/7/72, 12/18/73). In later years, Drums/Space is not included. It can be argued that Space at least should be counted as part of Dark Star; but I felt that the Dark Stars coming out of Space are distinct.

12/15/72 – I included the 14-minute post-Truckin’ jam as part of Dark Star, but the theme is not played until 25 seconds before the verse is sung, so Dark Star may be only 11 minutes long. To me the whole post-Truckin' jam feels like Dark Star, even though (as on 12/6/73) the theme isn't actually stated for a long time.
3/24/73 – The post-Truckin’ jam is listed, but the reader can decide whether this is part of Dark Star or not.
10/18/74 – It’s tricky to know where to start the pre-Dark Star jam, but the most obvious point is when the band comes in after the drum break, which seems to me to mark the end of Seastones. I timed Dark Star itself from when Garcia first plays the riff and the band clearly enters Dark Star mode. (This is inconsistent, I know.) If you include Seastones as part of the full Dark Star jam, then the entire length becomes a mammoth 61:30.

Over the years the Dead sometimes played little pre-Dark Star jams before the intro, often as part of tuning. I tried to list these but usually didn’t include them in the Dark Star timing. More on these in the next section:


SONGS GOING INTO DARK STAR

Mountains of the Moon>Dark Star – 2/11/69, 2/15/69, 2/22/69, 2/27/69, 4/5/69, 4/22/69, 6/7/69
This is perhaps the most mystical and appropriate opening to Dark Star the Dead ever came up with, but they didn’t develop it very far. This particular transition raised a categorical question – should the little jam played before Dark Star be considered a Mountains outro or a Dark Star prelude? (Of course, it’s both at once.) Out of custom, I didn’t include it in the Dark Star timings, but for the record these are the jam lengths, timed from the point Garcia starts playing electric:
2/11/69 - :22
2/15/69 - :16
2/22/69 - :30
2/27/69 – 1:02
(3/1/69 does not segue.)
4/5/69 - :40
4/22/69 – 1:00
6/7/69 – 0:00 (Garcia jumps right into Dark Star.)
If you want to time the prelude from the moment Garcia stops playing acoustic (about where it starts on the Live/Dead album), it usually takes only 10-20 seconds for him to switch guitars, so even the longest of these preludes is still under 90 seconds. The longest, ironically, is on 4/26/69 where Garcia plays for 1:24 before deciding to skip Dark Star.

On 5/23/72, a 90-second jam leads out of tuning and serves as a little prelude to Dark Star, kind of a flashback to the Mountains preludes. It’s very effective, but they didn’t follow up this idea until the next year.
A couple times in early ’73, the WRS Prelude was played as an intro to Dark Star: 3/21/73 (1:06)
3/28/73 (2:16)
Then in fall ’73, they made a habit of introducing Dark Star either with little bass intros or melodic tuning jams, more deliberate than the quick tuneups earlier in the year. This is consistently done before every non-segued Dark Star that fall, so it seems to be their way of ‘setting the stage’:
9/11/73 (tuning jam, a minute)
10/19/73 (a little tuning jam, about 45 seconds)
10/25/73 (just a few bass strums out of tuning)
10/30/73 (bass intro, a minute)
11/11/73 (tuning jam, a minute)
12/6/73 (2:05 tuning jam) (This one I included in the timing since Dark Star doesn’t start with the theme as usual, but flows out of tuning.)

A few late-period Dark Stars also start with significant short jams before the intro: 10/26/89, 8/16/91 and 9/26/91 (noted in the list of times). A couple other Dark Stars begin with a little unrelated noodling before the actual theme is played: 10/16/89 (40 seconds) and 12/12/92 (20 seconds).

These are the songs that went into Dark Star a number of times:

Cryptical>Dark Star: 3/30/68, 2/28/69, 4/15/69, 8/21/69, 1/23/70
Other One>Dark Star: 11/5/70, 1/20/79
Truckin’>Dark Star: 11/8/70, 7/18/72, 10/26/72, 12/15/72, 3/24/73
Let It Grow>Dark Star: 11/30/73, 12/18/73, 5/14/74

Playing>Dark Star: 10/9/89, 11/1/90, 3/17/93, 9/13/93, 3/30/94
Estimated>Dark Star: 3/29/90, 6/14/91, 9/10/91, 9/22/93 (Three of these shows are with sax players. 6/14/91 Estimated has repeated DS teases at the end.)
Drums/Space>Dark Star: 9/20/90, 12/14/90, 6/22/91, 9/6/91, 6/8/92, 6/18/92, 12/16/92, 6/23/93

These are all the other songs that only segued into Dark Star once or twice over the years:
1/20/68 Caution Jam
1/22/68 Spanish Jam
6/5/69 Sittin’ on Top of the World
5/25/72 Wharf Rat
10/18/72 Playing>drums (the only time Dark Star came directly out of Drums)
10/18/74 Seastones>drums
12/31/89 Victim
7/12/90 Foolish Heart
12/31/90 Eyes
(6/17/91 Uncle John’s Band) *tease only
(6/28/91 Wharf Rat) *tease only
(9/8/91 Saint) *tease only
10/31/91 Spoonful
3/9/92 Corrina
6/22/92 Victim

This list only includes the first part of Dark Star in the ‘90s – the second part almost always came out of Space (with a couple exceptions: it followed I Need a Miracle on 10/16/89, and the Other One on 9/26/91).  
Some songs didn’t make this list since there are hard stops of a few seconds before Dark Star starts (like Iko on 12/12/90, Ship of Fools on 9/24/91, or Man Smart on 3/20/92 & 12/12/92).
Dark Stars in the early years predominantly had cold starts, but in the ‘90s Dark Star usually segued from another song. From ’89-94, only eight Dark Stars (out of about 33 full versions) had non-segued starts.


NEW ‘90s ARRANGEMENTS

When Dark Star returned after the hiatus, it often served as a second-set container in which other songs or abstract pieces would be played. No songs had been played ‘inside’ Dark Star since 1972, but on 12/31/78 they ventured a (brief) Dark Star>Other One>Dark Star. ‘90s shows frequently had Dark Star split in two.
The most adventurous attempts were 10/16/89 and 9/26/91, which had entire song suites between the two parts of Dark Star, but this was rarely tried. 9/20/90 had an unusual post-drums Dark Star>Playing reprise>Dark Star, but otherwise Dark Star song sandwiches weren’t attempted in this era.
(There was one unique reverse sandwich – Playing>Dark Star>Playing on 11/1/90, the only time a full Dark Star was played inside another song. The Wharf Rat>Dark Star tease>Wharf Rat on 6/28/91 is also notable for echoing Wharf Rat’s debut inside Dark Star on 2/18/71.)
More common were Dark Stars with Drums/Space inside: 3/29/90, 10/20/90, 11/1/90, 4/1/91, 9/10/91, 10/31/91, and 12/12/92.
Just as common were the Dark Stars that faded out into Drums/Space and never returned – for instance on 12/31/89, 6/14/91, 9/24/91, 3/9/92, 3/17/93, 9/22/93, and the last two Dark Stars in March ’94. After 1990 it became the norm for Dark Stars to be left dangling and unfinished.

One feature unique to the ‘90s were Dark Stars split across shows, starting in one show and finishing some days later: 12/12-14/90, 6/8-18-22/92, and 12/12-16/92. 
A case could be made for the various Dark Star teases of summer ’91 as continuing a ‘single’ Dark Star across shows, but I don’t think so. If this was the intent it doesn’t quite come off – to me they’re just unfinished teases.

The second verse, not sung since 1972, returned in the ‘80s. Garcia sang it pretty regularly through 1990, but it became rare after that as Dark Stars were increasingly left unfinished. The second verse appeared only four times in 1991, three times in 1992, then was never heard again.

In 1991-92, Garcia frequently played instrumental verses instead of singing them – these are noted on the list. This was something of a throwback: during Dark Star’s first year, he would typically play the verse melody during the jam, but this practice faded out in ’69, only to resurface 22 years later. The difference in ’91 was that an instrumental verse often replaced a sung verse, or simply served to identify a passing jam as Dark Star.

It was rare for a Dark Star to be played at length in the final post-Drums part of a show. Dark Stars in the ‘90s (including the ones split across shows) were usually finished after Space, and sometimes there would be short Dark Star jams coming out of Space, but most of these are wrapped up quickly. However, on occasion an entire Dark Star would be played in the last stretch of the set: 1/20/79 was the first time, and 6/23/93 the last, and not surprisingly these are kept short. 9/20/90 is the huge exception in being the only full-length two-verse Dark Star played in the second set after Space.

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GRAPH ISSUES

I made the graph using a Google spreadsheet. This had the benefit of being free and relatively easy to use, but imposed severe limitations on the graph. In short, it’s not at all what it should be
- There’s no text in the graph to indicate times, song titles, cuts, etc. – ideally these would be displayed within the bars. 
- Everything in the list (tunings, other songs, Drums/Space breaks) was included in the total Dark Star times, which was not the intent, but couldn't be avoided.
- I couldn’t easily indicate time breaks for the Dark Stars split across a show (e.g., something like the 6/17/91 teases was impossible to represent on this kind of graph).
- On the graph, times had to be converted from seconds to decimals, so the lengths are more approximate than exact. (You’ll notice the time totals are in fractions of 100 rather than 60.) These figures could be improved and made more accurate, but they’re close enough for now.
- For Drums/Space, I set an arbitrary time of 10 minutes for each; otherwise the total lengths for these Dark Stars would be considerably inflated. I would have liked to just display something like a slash // in place of these lengthy interludes.
- I simplified the jam divisions to make the graph less cluttered – no bass or drum solos are marked, for instance. But these should be noted with symbols. The color key was also kept simple, since most of the labels had to be duplicated to plot out the graph. 
- Years couldn’t be spaced out; I would've preferred a more pastel color palette than this program offered; and the appearance isn’t quite what I hoped for.

Basically, I regard this as a rough draft that needs to be replaced. If someone with more graphing experience wants to undertake a new and better graph, at least I now have all the Dark Star timings needed to make one.

For a different example of a Dark Star graph, see this one made many years ago by Volkmar Rupp & Uli Teute:
Though it’s missing a number of Dark Stars due to its age, it also has several advantages over my graph, including text within the graph and many more jam labels.

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RANDOM NOTES


11-13-72 – Bear’s AUD has a tapeflip; the best copy is patched at 11:17 with 1:35 of the alternate AUD. The other AUD seems to still be 40 seconds longer but that’s because the tape slows down. 
2-26-73 – the first Dark Star where I noticed a lengthy cymbal intro at the start, which Bill did a number of times in ’73. Still need to check if he did it earlier. 
11-30-73 – needs a 20-second AUD patch from 7:33-7:52 
2-24-74 – needs a 30-second AUD patch from 25:47-26:19