- I Courtesy Dark Star channels the Dead The Dark Star Orchestra performs Grateful Dead covers that sound ‘eerily like the band’ Aaron Shakra Pulse Reporter When is a cover band not simply a cover band? When it attempts to channel, or actually become, the liv ing embodiment of the past. Dark Star Orchestra — who will play this Saturday at the McDonald Theatre — revives Grateful Dead perform ances from the band’s long, lan guorous history and plays them in their entirety. You might as well call it “Grateful Dead Redux.” Dark Star’s performances are culled from the book “Deadbase,” which in its 11th iteration features information on 2,314 concerts the Grateful Dead played together from 1965 until 1995. The band has also performed Jerry Garcia Band sets. It doesn’t do carbon copy covers of performances, but rather improvis es in the same parts of the songs that the Grateful Dead did. The audience isn’t privy to which set or era the band is drawing from for its perform ances. This information is an nounced afterwards, but the band said keen fans will probably be able to pick up on clues. “We don’t do a note for note thing, but we stay in character,” John Kadlecik, guitarist and “Jerry Gar cia” of the band said. He has played "We all have a mutual love for the arrangements that the Dead used to play their own music" John Kadlecik guitarist guitar since 1985, and is also a clas sically trained violin player. He said he found the violin to be a limited in strument for improvisation whereas in picking up the guitar, he found im provisation “a given.” “Once you get into the band thing, any way you want to go is the right way,” Kadlecik said. Dark Star Orchestra and its six other members have played 800 shows since its inception in late summer of 1997. Kadlecik said he and the other band members have “deeply explored every area” of the Grateful Dead’s music, both collec tively and on each of their own time. “By listening, we’ve acquired these personal databases,” he said. “Individually, we’ve all listened to enormous amounts of the recordings —just of out fun.” The band’s history is rooted in the Chicago Grateful Dead scene. Kadle cik previously played in the band Hairball Willie, who performed both originals and Dead covers. He noted a distinction between Dead cover bands and “dead-head” bands and said Dark Star originated from net working in the dead-head band scene. “We all have a mutual love for the arrangements that the Dead used to play their own music,” he said, adding that the band pays attention to the smallest detail for its Dead sets, including their musical equip ment and sound palette at the time. Band publicist Dave Weissman mentioned one “hair-raising factor” Dark Star Orchestra has the poten tial to elicit for Grateful Dead fans. “Essentially, you can kinda tap into the spirit of why they’re doing what they’re doing,” Weissman said. “I’m not saying Dark Star channels the Dead, but they try.” "Essentially, you can kinda tap into the spirit of why they're doing what they're doing." Dave Weissman band publicist Downtown Deb, host of the long running “Dead Air” which airs every Saturday night on KLCC, said she finds the Dead’s music “very power ful and healing” and called Dark Star Orchestra “very professional.” “They sound remarkably, eerily like the band,” she said. “It’s an emotional thing hearing the music you love.” The show starts at 8 p.m. Tickets are $18 in advance, available at both Fastixx outlets and the McDonald Theatre box office. Contact the Pulse reporter at aaronshakra@dailyemerald.com. March 5,6,7,8 813,14,15 Begins at 8pm Ticket sold at the UO Ticket Office on the main floor of the EMU (Erb Mem. Union), (all 541-^46-^63 This play contains Strong Sexual Content. JIM I7MVI Hflll Community Center for the Perfomiuj Arts ■ Friday 8th & Lincoln Usbopaloozalll: Tribe 8, Cod-Des, Aisha Ayers, Laura Love Duo Iordan Blumbei^-Emve Rock, Hip Hop, Spoken Ward, Folk, Performance Art pm $7 UO students, tio general public ■Saturday ■ Usbopaloozalll: Station Waj, Shelley Doty X-Tet, WYMPROV!, Arjuna Criest, Chris Pureka, Iordan Blumber^-Em^e Hard Rock, Rock/Funk, Comedy, Folk, Performance Art Tl* P* $71)0 students,$io general public ■ Wednesday ■ anticon taatiiiaysole, Grand Buffet Hip Hop l:oo pm $io advance, In door ■.Thursday ■ California Cuitar Trio wrHi Tom Griesjraber Acoustic Guitars/Chapman Stick l:oo pm $i$ advance, $17 door All Ages Wetcome • 687-2746 afflwal (MmPmmibmkfwmrnmmtm Ho t$S& jj|||^ fpo?l |^ R«#t»#nmi I ftakwy, C«Mri« Mats, ?ow»t’» *»«««», i t*MI Uf* ttMaotetaancaBd Acrtteay Amu4 Hmmtm ■ Bni Actor 7:10 & 9:20 Hjgh»y ■Hfe* kArorr-PRocF fence® F:36 Nighty Sat & Sun Mat 2:46pm folk to ber; ^ 9:30 Nightly /mu » fifes t»? PIANIST UR*,UtA 40 rtifiWy ode classifieds • 346-4343 ‘fj,. //ju-i/r „•/// „ tWISt UO School of Music Chamber Music Series St. Petersburg String Quartet Don’t miss this award-winning Russian quartet as they perform compelling music of their homeland: the romantic Three Novelettes by Glazunov, the emotional Quartet No. 2 by Shostakovich, and a new work which will have received its world premiere the night before: Rhapsody for Guitar and String Quartet by Zurab Nadarejshvili—with the brilliant classical guitarist Paul Galbraith joining the quartet. Thurs., March 6*8 p.m. BEALL CONCERT HALL Tickets $27, $22, $12 at the Hult Center (682-5000) or EMU Ticket Office (346-4363). Free Musical Insights with Robert Hurwitz, 7 p.m.