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Jazz is Dead - Great Sky River (2001)  Music

Posted by delpotro at Sept. 18, 2018
Jazz is Dead - Great Sky River (2001)

Jazz is Dead - Great Sky River (2001)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 452 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 156 Mb | 01:08:02
Jazz Rock, Fusion | Label: Zebra Records

Made up of seasoned players like Jimmy Herring from the Aquarium Rescue Unit, former Santana bassist Alfonso Johnson, and Dixie Dregs alums keyboardist T Lavitz and drummer Rod Morgenstein, Jazz Is Dead doesn't function so much as a Grateful Dead cover band than as an outfit that uses Dead gems as jumping-off points for a sonic journey that leads the listener not into well-traveled grooves, but into an enthralling soundscape without rules, vocals, or fixed time signatures. Superior playing and that special brand of ESP that all good jam bands possess further enrich these adroit and artful reinterpretations of Dead songs. "St Stephen" and "The Eleven" come out sounding like a cross between Indian bazaar music and the Allman Brothers (Herring spent a year filling in for an ailing Dickie Betts in the Allmans). Recorded live at the IMAC Theater in Huntington, New York, this disc captures all the nuances and guitar wizardry that Herring can wring out of his instrument, but one suspects that this band is even more spectacular live.
Jerry Garcia & Merl Saunders - Live at Keystone, Vol. 1 (1973/1988) [Reissue 2004] PS3 ISO + DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

Jerry Garcia & Merl Saunders - Live at Keystone, Vol. 1 (1973/1988) [Reissue 2004]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 55:06 minutes | Scans included | 1,68 GB
or DSD64 2.0 (from SACD-ISO to Tracks.dsf) > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | Full Scans included | 1,53 GB
or FLAC (carefully converted & encoded to tracks) 24bit/48 kHz | Full Scans included | 659 MB

This 1973 release features what is essentially a Bay Area bar band led by Merl Saunders (keyboards) and Jerry Garcia (guitar) during the latter musician's downtime from the Grateful Dead. Along with the two subsequent "encore" volumes, Live at Keystone includes performances drawn from the quartet's July 10-11, 1973, run in the intimate confines of Keystone Korners in Berkeley. With the support of Bill Vitt(percussion) and John Kahn (bass), the pair jams their way through an eclectic assortment of covers and a few equally inspired original instrumentals.