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Don't Let Go (Jerry Garcia Band album)

Don't Let Go
DontLetGo.jpg
Live album by Jerry Garcia Band
Released January 23, 2001
Recorded May 21, 1976
Genre Rock
Label Grateful Dead Records
Jerry Garcia Band chronology
How Sweet It Is
(1997)
Don't Let Go
(2001)
Shining Star
(2001)
Jerry Garcia chronology
The Pizza Tapes
(2000)
Don't Let Go
(2001)
Shining Star
(2001)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
The Music Box 4/5 stars

Don't Let Go is the third live album, and fourth album overall, by the Jerry Garcia Band. It was recorded on May 21, 1976 at the Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco, with a bonus track recorded on September 11, 1976 at the Keystone in Berkeley. It was released on January 23, 2001.

From January 1976 to August 1977, the lineup of the Jerry Garcia Band was the one featured on this recording – Jerry Garcia on guitar and vocals, Keith Godchaux on keyboards, Donna Jean Godchaux on vocals, John Kahn on bass, and Ron Tutt on drums. Another album recorded by this lineup is Pure Jerry: Theatre 1839, San Francisco, July 29 & 30, 1977.

Jerry Garcia plays a Travis Bean guitar on this recording.

On Allmusic, Lindsay Planer said, "This band is about infectious rhythms and soul. Garcia plays with an energy and freedom of spirit which he rarely achieved during his final two decades with the Grateful Dead. This was likely due, at least in part, to the encyclopedic catalog of material... The band uses the structure of each song as a platform for their unique brand of instinctual aural acrobatics. The interplay amongst the instrumental quartet is best described as inspired telepathy.... Don't Let Go is highly recommended for the curious enthusiast as well as the insatiable Deadhead."

In The Music Box, John Metzger wrote, "Unfortunately, Don't Let Go is not the definitive, perfect set from JGB, though Deadheads undoubtedly will find the album – which was compiled from a Bay Area concert held on May 21, 1976 – to be a must-have collection. Likewise, the uninitiated who might be open to this sort of thing certainly will find the spark of brilliance that shines through many of the tracks and hides just beneath the surface on several others. Those most passive of Deadheads and the just faintly curious, however, might want to wait for something a little less flawed."


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