The Moma Dance

, comment by fhqwhgads , attached to 2017-07-22
fhqwhgads There is a four-note figure resembling John Coltrane's A Love Supreme near the beginning of the jam proper, later what sounds like a tentative group-mind decision to segue into The Lizards (thankfully, they keep jamming Moma), and a few minutes before the > into Breath and Burning there's a part of the jam that sounds somewhat like a slightly slower version of the portion of the 12/31/99 Split Open and Melt right before it segues into Catapult. That's quite a lot of interesting musical intertextuality, in my humble opinion.
, comment by WeekapaugKrol , attached to 2016-07-03
WeekapaugKrol FHQWHGADS comment is the greatest comment ever!!
, comment by fhqwhgads , attached to 2016-07-03
fhqwhgads I could deal with a lot more versions of The Moma Dance like this. There's so much potential in the funkengroove, and most versions do little to reveal its real ultimate power.
, comment by n00b100 , attached to 2016-07-03
n00b100 There are jams from last year, even great jams from last year, that don't approach the musical power of this truly unexpected jam. One of the reasons why you can't go ahead and just write 2016 off.
, comment by makisupaman , attached to 2011-07-01
makisupaman Far and away my favorite version from 3.0. Trey seemed especially hungry, encouraged in part by the momentousness of the occasion as well as by his near flawless execution of the rarely performed Peaches that preceded it. The wave of reaction as the song concludes speaks volumes.
, comment by Boy_Man_God_Sith , attached to 1998-07-15
Boy_Man_God_Sith Manteca teases from Trey starting around 3:10


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