Bob Weir & Ratdog
There may never have been a band that has evolved more dramatically
than RatDog. It began as a laid-back blues ensemble in 1995, but now it
has become a snarling rock band that has a fabulous jazz trio at its heart.
Of course, all those forms are simply different facets of Bob Weir's unruly
musical personality.
Even when his first band, the Grateful Dead, was playing close to 100
shows yearly, Weir needed other outlets, and he developed a solo career
that began with albums like "Ace" and "Heaven Help the
Fool" and continued through his sidebands "Kingfish" and
"Bobby and the Midnites." He then settled into a special duo
partnership with the distinguished bassist Rob Wasserman.
As their music evolved, they reached out into musical realms that required
more players. RatDog was born, and began to grow. First came the drummer,
Jay Lane, one of the Bay Area's best, a member of the Freaky Executives
and the Uptones. He introduced to RatDog the incredibly gifted jazz/blues/rock
pianist, Jeff Chimenti. Guitarist Mark Karan came to Weir's notice in
the summer of 1998 when they played together in The Other Ones, and he
proved far too good to let go. The Lane/Chimenti jazz pipeline produced
another addition to RatDog, the fine Bay Area saxophonist Kenny Brooks,
a New England Conservatory of Music graduate and a long-time member of
the Charlie Hunter Quartet.
Finally, early in 2003 Rob Wasserman decided to concentrate on his various
personal projects (his duo relationship with Weir endures), and RatDog
went sniffin' for a new bassist, finding him in Bay Area veteran Robin
Sylvester. The London native has been a Bay Area fixture for more than
20 years, and is best known for his long-time close association with the
legendary (and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member) saxophonist Steve Douglas,
which put Robin in recording and performing situations with Phil Spector,
Bob Dylan, the Beach Boys, and Ry Cooder. Robin is a vital addition to
a band that's ready to explode.
RatDog's music covers the majority of the Grateful Dead songbook, including
Garcia classics like "Standing on the Moon," St. Stephen,"
"Terrapin," and "Touch of Grey" and Pigpen's "Lovelight,"
as well as Weir's complete solo repertoire from blues like "Good
Morning Little Schoolgirl" to the psychedelic stylings of his Grateful
Dead classics like "Playing in the Band," "The Other One,"
and "Throwing Stones," to his own Dead rockers like "Cassidy,"
and "Sugar Magnolia."
The 2000 release of the band's first studio album, Evening Moods, added
a bevy of hot tunes to the song list, including "Odessa," "Bury
Me Standing," "Two Djinn," and "Ashes and Glass."
2001 saw the release of Live at Roseland, a double-CD collection from
a Portland, Oregon show, and a big favorite among Dead Heads. Hybrid Recordings
released Weir Here, a two-CD career retrospective of Bob's complete ouvre
(one disc studio, one live) in 2004.
Bob Weir and RatDog. It'll grab hold and not let you go.
Let us connect you with a Bob Weir Agent now to book
Bob Weir & Ratdog to appear at your next corporate,
private or special event!
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