Given all the live documents
Gov't Mule issued since the premature death of bassist
Allen Woody,
The Deepest End is easily the most satisfying. Recorded and filmed during the 2003 Jazz and Heritage Festival in New Orleans, the show features the most astonishing array of guest bassists yet, and so many other guests the date was like a festival unto itself. Among the bassists preset for a night of music that began at 10:10 p.m. and ended at 3:35 a.m. were
Jack Casady,
Les Claypool,
Roger Glover,
Will Lee,
Jason Newsted,
Rob Wasserman,
Victor Wooten,
George Porter, Jr.,
Conrad Lozano, and a half-dozen others. Other musicians participating in the festivities -- many of whom who had gigs in the Crescent City at the same time -- include
David Hidalgo,
Bernie Worrell,
Fred Wesley,
Karl Denson,
Sonny Landreth, the
Dirty Dozen Brass Band horns,
Béla Fleck, and
Ivan Neville. There are two CDs, packed to the gills with music from that evening. The mixture of covers and
Gov't Mule originals is, to say the very least, captivating: from the opener "Bad Little Doggie" (given its definitive on-tape version here) and "Lay of the Sunflower" to "Goin' Down" and "John the Revelator." The sound is warm and the mix very fluid, very live. The performance is completely inspired and jaw-droppingly sophisticated despite its spontaneity. There are 20 tracks over the pair of CDs, accounting for two hours and 34 minutes total playing time, and the DVD features 20 more and lasts over three hours. There are some major differences in tracks between the CDs and DVDs, making it pretty much essential for
Mule fans: covers of "Wasted Time," "Sweet Leaf," "Politician," "Voodoo Chile," and a heft dose of
Mule originals. All told, this and
Rush's stellar
In Rio triple disc are easily the live recorded events of 2003. ~ Thom Jurek