Live at the Mile High Music Festival will come to be a notable recording in the
Dave Matthews Band's live oeuvre for one very significant reason: it's the first show to officially appear on CD without founding member
LeRoi Moore on saxophone. He had been injured in an accident earlier in the year, and was recuperating during this tour. He unexpectedly and tragically passed away three weeks after this performance.
DMB numbered four persons as of this show, with guests
Jeff Coffin on saxophone, guitarist
Tim Reynolds, and trumpeter
Rashawn Ross filling out the ranks. Unlike the two-disc
Volume 13 in the
DMB Live Trax (Live at Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO.) series that was released on the same day, this set is a three-disc whopper . As is the M.O. for this band -- the material is made up of mainly crowd-pleasers from the catalog, with a couple of choice covers thrown in. Perhaps it was the addition of a new sax player in the lineup that put this group further on its toes and pushed them, perhaps it was the crowd, perhaps it was the weather: whatever the reason, this set fares far better than
Live Trax, Vol., 13 recorded the month before. While the former set sounds like the band is going through the motions, this gig finds the band with more spring in its step and its members seem far more engaged with one another and the audience. That's not to say that some of this isn't the same old, same old --
"Ants Marching," "Tripping Billies," and
"Jimi Thing" are all here -- but there are some fresh twists and turns as well. The cover for this gig is
Peter Gabriel's hit
"Sledgehammer," that isn't as rhythmically compelling as the original, but it works.
"Gravedigger" makes a renewed appearance here, as does
"#41." But the newer material works very well in this context, songs like
"Corn Bread," "Louisiana Bayou," and the relatively recent
"Old Dirt Hill." Conversely, the cover of
Sly Stone's
"Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)" isn't perhaps as exhausted as it sounds on
Volume 13. Once again, the dictum holds true: if you are a
Matthews fan, you'll be good with this and want to own it. ~ Thom Jurek